Honor’s Magic V6 specifies three primary folding times


On paper, the Honor Magic V6 looks like a huge leap forward for foldable phones: it’s the thinnest phone ever, with the biggest battery, and the best water resistance ever. In practice, only the larger battery feels like a meaningful improvement. Other upgrades are only partially superior to what came before.

This is not entirely the hon.’s fault. It’s becoming more difficult to make a foldable phone stand out; Even last year’s offerings felt like full-fledged flagships. Huawei Bora X Max It featured a strange new aspect ratio, both of which we expect to see Samsung and apple Repeat later this year. Then there Threeswhich feels like a completely separate beast. But book-style Android foldables have matured well, and are now competitive with regular flagship phones in almost every respect.

Honor has been one of the manufacturers pushing foldable devices forward more aggressively, so it has earned the right to release a phone with relatively modest hardware improvements. I just wish the company had put more effort into fixing the software, as MagicOS remains the main thing holding the Magic V6 back.

Image of Honor Magic V6 on a wooden cart with potted plant and glassware, closed and showing the backImage of Honor Magic V6 on a wooden cart with potted plant and glassware, closed and showing the back

$1930

Goodness

  • Battery life is two days
  • IP69 dust and water resistance
  • The thinnest foldable phone ever
  • Seven years of software support

The bad

  • MagicOS is often frustrating
  • It lacks the OPPO’s almost invisible crease
  • The triple camera is good, but tablets are still better

Magic V6 It was launched at the MWC trade show in February. At the time, it was only on sale in China; It has taken until now for Honor to begin the global rollout. Phone now For sale in Malaysia and SingaporeIt costs 7,699 Malaysian ringgit (about $1,930). More countries, including the UK and Europe, are set to follow later this month.

It’s fair to start with the three firsts for a foldable phone, even if they’re mostly incremental. For starters, it’s the world’s thinnest foldable device, measuring just 4mm thick when open, and 8.75mm thick when folded and closed (well, the white version is – the other colors are fractionally thicker at 9mm). Closed, no thicker than iPhone 17 Pro MaxWhich is a real achievement. But it is only 0.05 mm thinner than Previous generation Honor foldable. That’s the width of a human hair, so I think it’s safe to say we’re in no-man’s-land here.

Image of Honor Magic V6 USB-C port

The gold version of my phone isn’t exactly the thinnest, but each half is still thicker than the USB-C port.

The Magic V6 is also the first foldable phone to be IP69 rated, meaning it is dust-tight and able to survive exposure to high-pressure, high-temperature water jets. The rating means the V6 has better dust protection than the V5’s IP59 and can withstand exposure to water compared to IP68. Pixel 10 Pro Fold It is not possible, but the practical implications are still minimal. I can’t say I experience high-pressure jets with my phone in my hand very often, but even so, the extra peace of mind is welcome.

The most important of the three upgrades is the battery, which is now 6,660 mAh thanks to improved silicon and carbon cells (although China got a more capacious 7,150 mAh model). That’s larger than any other foldable, and represents a reasonable jump from the Magic V5’s 5,820 mAh capacity. And it pays off. The V5 can last a day and then some, but I’ve been using the V6 comfortably for two days at a time, charging it every night, and I’m struggling to see how even a heavy user could run this thing over the course of a day. This, at least, seems like a meaningful improvement.

Image of Honor Magic V6 on a wooden cart with a potted plant and glassware, closed but showing the main screen

Closed, it’s increasingly difficult to distinguish foldable phones like these from regular phones.

Image of the Honor Magic V6 on a wooden cart with a potted plant and glassware, closed but showing the top of the main screen

The Magic V6’s default display settings are set to an uncomfortably bright display setting, but you can make them more muted.

Photo of the Honor Magic V6 rear camera

The triple camera island is large, but it’s actually much thinner than the Magic V5’s.

Image of the back finish of the Honor Magic V6 and the Honor logo

It’s a garish touch, but I don’t mind the shiny gold effect – it reminds me a bit of silicone chips.

Elsewhere, things are boring, but only because I take it for granted in flagship foldable devices. Of course the Magic V6 is powered by Qualcomm Snapdragon 8 Elite Gen 5 processor. Of course, it offers up to 512GB of storage and 16GB of RAM. Of course it includes fast wireless charging (but of course it does not support Qi2). Of course, it has dual 120Hz OLED displays, a triple rear camera, and stylus support. These things are not expected anymore, they are Presumably.

However, despite the progress foldable phones have made, there are drawbacks. The camera is still the big one. The triple rear camera here is definitely impressive and probably the best of any foldable bar Oppo Find N6. But, just like that phone, the camera system here lags behind high-end phones, hampered by smaller sensors that limit light capture, heavy saturation in many shots, and some inconsistent color processing. In short: The camera is good, but not great, and that’s still one of the big compromises you’ll make with any foldable phone.

1/18

As expected, the 50MP main camera captures bright and detailed shots.

Crease is another thing, of course. The V6 is fairly subtle, but not as hard to spot as a V6 One is almost imperceptible On the latest OPPO. Then there is durability. Yes, there’s an IP69 rating, but it’s still a foldable: the hinge is fragile, the inner screen is soft, and it’s difficult to fully protect it with a case. Outside of China, Honor can’t match the repair and support infrastructure of the likes of Samsung, so it may have a harder time if it breaks.

Then there is the software. The good news is that Honor promises seven years of OS and security updates, two more than Oppo and the same offered by Google and Samsung. The bad is that Honor’s MagicOS is among my least favorite Android skins. The UI is noisy (and increasingly inspired by Apple’s Liquid Glass), Honor supplies the phone with its own brand apps, and multitasking isn’t as powerful or intuitive as that offered by Oppo. I much prefer using other versions of Android, and the software is one of the main reasons why the Find N6 foldable phone remains my favorite.

Image of Honor Magic V6 on a wooden cart with a potted plant and glassware, opened to show the main screen

MagicOS loves AI widgets and glass UI elements.

We don’t know exactly what the foldable iPhone, or Samsung’s impending Galaxy Z Fold 8 for that matter, will offer. But Apple will be entering a mature foldable market, and I have to give credit to Honor as one of the companies that has made sure that happens. Over the past few years, its Magic foldable devices have pushed the limits of foldable design and battery capacity time and time again, and the Magic V6 is the culmination of that steady hardware progress, even if Honor has let its software side disappear. It’s fully foldable and impressive, but all those extra upgrades are starting to get boring. Let’s see if Apple can make things interesting again.

Photography by Dominic Preston/The Verge

Agree to follow: Honor Magic V6

Every smart device now requires you to agree to a series of terms and conditions before you can use it, contracts that virtually no one reads. It is impossible for us to read and analyze every one of these agreements. But we’re starting to count exactly how many times you have to press “Agree” to use devices when we review them since these are agreements that most people don’t read and certainly can’t negotiate.

To use Magic V6, you must agree to:

  • Google Terms of Service
  • Google Play Terms of Service
  • Google Privacy Policy (included in Terms of Service)
  • Installing apps and updates: “You agree that this device may also automatically download and install updates and apps from Google, your carrier, and your device manufacturer, possibly using cellular data.”
  • Honor End User Software License Agreement
  • Basic Honor Service Statement

There are also a variety of optional agreements, including:

  • Providing anonymized location data to Google services
  • “Allows apps and services to scan for nearby Wi-Fi networks and devices at any time, even when Wi-Fi or Bluetooth is turned off.”
  • Submit usage and diagnostic data to Google
  • Allow nearby contacts to find and share with you
  • Google Gemini Apps Privacy Notice If you choose to use Gemini Assistant
  • User Experience Improvement Program Honored
  • Honor system software update service
  • Honor Magazine Open User Agreement
  • Honorary User Agreement
  • Honor Connect User Agreement
  • Honor AI Suggestions User Agreement
  • Honor website services

Honor includes several optional agreements during setup associated with specific features. Other Google features, such as Google Wallet, may require additional agreements.

The final tally: six mandatory agreements and more than 12 optional agreements.

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