Honor Magic 7 Pro vs Oppo Find X9 Ultra | TechTalkTown
Honor Magic 7 Pro vs Oppo Find X9 Ultra
Honor Magic 7 Pro
Honor
8.1
Versatile flagship, unbeatable on discount
Oppo Find X9 Ultra
Oppo
8.8
The best camera phone of 2026
Honor Magic 7 Pro
What Reviewers Agree On
An incredibly versatile, do-everything flagship — excellent display, silky performance, fast charging and a strong camera.
Class-leading audio — among the best-sounding phones tested, large and boomy enough to embarrass the vivo X200 Pro and Find X8 Pro.
Very fast charging — ~100W wired (full in ~30 minutes) plus 80W wireless.
Exceptional value, especially on its frequent steep discounts (around 35% off list).
An industry-leading 7-year software/OS support commitment (Honor Alpha Plan).
Deal Breakers
Pros & Cons
Honor Magic 7 Pro
Pros
An incredibly versatile, do-everything flagship — excellent display, silky performance, fast charging and a strong camera.
Class-leading audio — among the best-sounding phones tested, large and boomy enough to embarrass the vivo X200 Pro and Find X8 Pro.
Very fast charging — ~100W wired (full in ~30 minutes) plus 80W wireless.
Exceptional value, especially on its frequent steep discounts (around 35% off list).
An industry-leading 7-year software/OS support commitment (Honor Alpha Plan).
Detailed Comparison
Design & Build
Honor Magic 7 Pro
A premium, properly flagship build — though a few awkward decisions keep it from feeling completely cohesive.
The design and build quality are about as flagship as you'd expect — an overall pleasant, premium device.
Honor has impressed with its hardware of late — the Magic 7 Pro continues that with an excellent, versatile package.
Some awkward decisions in the design process have led to a handset that feels less than the sum of its parts.
It includes a 3D depth camera on the front for more secure face unlock than optical-only systems.
Honor includes a SIM tool, a clear case and a 100W Supercharge power brick with USB-C cable in the box.
Oppo Find X9 Ultra
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The global/EU 5,270mAh battery is a downgrade versus the Magic 6 Pro and falls behind 6,000mAh rivals in endurance tests.
The camera leans heavily on AI processing and doesn't convincingly leapfrog the best (Pixel) — long zoom is notably weak.
Some awkward design and software decisions make it feel less than the sum of its parts at launch.
Oppo Find X9 Ultra
What Reviewers Agree On
One of the best — frequently the best — camera phones of 2026, with a uniquely versatile quad Hasselblad system and class-leading 10x optical zoom
Class-leading battery life: a 7,050mAh silicon-carbon cell routinely delivers 8–10+ hours of screen-on time and can stretch to two days
100W SuperVOOC wired and 50W AirVOOC wireless charging — roughly 0–100% in 45–52 minutes
Stunning, distinctive Hasselblad-inspired design widely called one of the best-looking phones of the year
Excellent, very bright display — ~3,600 nits HDR peak and ~1,800 nits full-screen outdoors
Snapdragon 8 Elite Gen 5 delivers top-of-chart benchmark performance
Best-in-class video on an Android phone, with strong stabilization and 8K30 / 4K120 Dolby Vision across lenses
Deal Breakers
Heavy and large (≈236–239g, ~9.1mm) with a polarising oversized circular camera island
Expensive (≈€1,699 / ~$1,100+ in China) with limited or no official availability in many markets
ColorOS trails Samsung and Google on AI-feature depth and integration, and feels iOS-derived to some users
Mediocre sustained performance — 3DMark stability around 49% with peak performance dropping within a minute
Cons
The global/EU 5,270mAh battery is a downgrade versus the Magic 6 Pro and falls behind 6,000mAh rivals in endurance tests.
The camera leans heavily on AI processing and doesn't convincingly leapfrog the best (Pixel) — long zoom is notably weak.
Some awkward design and software decisions make it feel less than the sum of its parts at launch.
Oppo Find X9 Ultra
Pros
One of the best — frequently the best — camera phones of 2026, with a uniquely versatile quad Hasselblad system and class-leading 10x optical zoom
Class-leading battery life: a 7,050mAh silicon-carbon cell routinely delivers 8–10+ hours of screen-on time and can stretch to two days
100W SuperVOOC wired and 50W AirVOOC wireless charging — roughly 0–100% in 45–52 minutes
Stunning, distinctive Hasselblad-inspired design widely called one of the best-looking phones of the year
Excellent, very bright display — ~3,600 nits HDR peak and ~1,800 nits full-screen outdoors
Snapdragon 8 Elite Gen 5 delivers top-of-chart benchmark performance
Best-in-class video on an Android phone, with strong stabilization and 8K30 / 4K120 Dolby Vision across lenses
Cons
Heavy and large (≈236–239g, ~9.1mm) with a polarising oversized circular camera island
Expensive (≈€1,699 / ~$1,100+ in China) with limited or no official availability in many markets
ColorOS trails Samsung and Google on AI-feature depth and integration, and feels iOS-derived to some users
Mediocre sustained performance — 3DMark stability around 49% with peak performance dropping within a minute
A Hasselblad-camera tribute in phone form — vegan leather, a symmetrical 'master eye' module and a Hexagon-inspired ring. Gorgeous to most, oversized to some, and undeniably heavy.
One of the best-looking phones of the year.
Inspired by the Hasselblad X2D camera — the most beautiful phone of 2026 so far.
The perfectly symmetrical 'master eye' camera module and Hasselblad-style shutter button clearly pay tribute to the brand's classic camera aesthetics.
The hardware is insanely ambitious, but the first thing you notice holding it isn't elegance — it's size and weight.
It weighs about 239g and measures ~9.1mm thick — a genuinely big phone.
Some find the huge circular camera apparatus ugly, when we usually ask for less intrusive camera bumps.
Display
Honor Magic 7 Pro
A 6.8-inch LTPO OLED that's a clear highlight — extremely bright, smooth and a genuine pleasure.
It's a 6.8-inch LTPO OLED at 1–120Hz with a very high HDR peak brightness — Honor claims up to 5,000 nits for small patches.
The same 6.8-inch FHD+ OLED at 120Hz peaks at a whopping 5,000 nits of HDR brightness — incredible outdoor visibility.
An overall pleasant experience with the display — bright, smooth and excellent for media.
The 5,000-nit figure is a momentary peak for small patches under the right conditions, not sustained full-screen brightness.
Oppo Find X9 Ultra
A 6.8-inch LTPO OLED with up to 144Hz and very high real-world brightness — among the brightest screens on any phone outdoors.
6.8-inch LTPO OLED panel up to 144Hz, with a maximum brightness around 1,800 nits and dimming as low as 1 nit.
Hits a staggering ~3,600 nits of peak HDR brightness, making it incredibly easy to see and edit shots in direct sunlight.
In manual mode the display peaks at 840 nits, rising to ~1,156 nits in auto on a 75% white patch and up to ~1,932 nits in the native gallery app.
The smoother 144Hz panel and 3,600-nit brightness outperform Samsung's display.
Cameras
Honor Magic 7 Pro
A versatile, AI-heavy quad system with a 200MP periscope — excellent main-camera and daylight results, but the AI doesn't quite leapfrog the best and long zoom disappoints.
It launched with Deepfake Detection and a 200MP 'Super Zoom' periscope camera alongside solid main and ultrawide hardware.
Daylight shots look absolutely awesome and the camera is still one of the best features of the phone.
It banks on AI to leapfrog the best camera phones, but that's not quite enough to get there.
The main lens handles moving objects at night better than the iPhone, and output is well suited to posting straight to social with vibrant colours.
Long zoom disappoints — at 25x the result was surprisingly bad versus an iPhone's max zoom, and only a 2.6x crop mode sits between 1x and the periscope.
Long-term owners report photos that are consistently amazing and sharp straight out of camera without editing.
Video tops out at 4K60 and is solid, but you wouldn't expect the best video quality on the market.
Oppo Find X9 Ultra
The reason to buy it. A Hasselblad-tuned quad system with the most versatile zoom on any phone, a true 10x optical periscope and an optional 300mm Hasselblad teleconverter. Near-universally praised, with only minor sharpness and ultrawide caveats.
A 200MP main, 200MP 3x telephoto, 50MP 10x optical telephoto and 50MP ultrawide, all Hasselblad-branded — camera-first overkill in the best way.
Consistently great photos, sharpness and dynamic range with really good color calibration — this phone did basically everything right in the camera department; an incredibly well-rounded smartphone camera.
Is this the best camera phone ever built? — my new favorite camera phone and one of the best Android phones I've ever used.
Even after a direct shootout, still the best camera phone I've ever used.
Detail is very good, but sharpness remains a bit underwhelming on the main camera.
Performance
Honor Magic 7 Pro
Snapdragon 8 Elite delivers flawless, buttery performance and strong sustained gaming with well-managed heat.
Overall performance is absolutely flawless and gaming is buttery smooth, including demanding titles like Genshin Impact and Wuthering Waves.
It posts impressive benchmark scores — a Vulkan score near 24,000 and an AnTuTu placing it in the top 4% of smartphones.
In 30-minute max-settings runs it held 60fps in Genshin (~39°C) and a stable 120fps in fast titles (~37°C) with only minor warming.
Performance is silky smooth in everyday use with welcome software polish this year.
It dissipates heat well around the back, further from the camera elements, rather than concentrating it in one hot spot.
Oppo Find X9 Ultra
Snapdragon 8 Elite Gen 5 puts it near the top of the benchmark charts, but sustained-load stability is mediocre and Oppo deliberately throttles early to control heat.
As expected, the Find X9 Ultra earns excellent benchmark scores near the top of the charts.
A 3D ultrasonic fingerprint scanner Oppo claims is 35% faster and 33% more reliable, plus vapor cooling to dissipate heat through the aluminium frame for better sustained performance.
3DMark returned ~7,530 best-loop and ~3,682 low-loop with only ~49% stability, and peak performance didn't last a minute — weak sustained behaviour.
Genshin Impact stayed consistently above 50fps and remained smooth even when throttling to ~30fps after ~16 minutes at 41.5°C, at under 4W power draw.
Honor of Kings averaged 144fps over 30 minutes at max settings; Genshin held max 60fps before stabilizing near 50fps.
Battery & Charging
Honor Magic 7 Pro
Very fast charging and solid all-day life for most — but the global/EU 5,270mAh cell is a downgrade versus the Magic 6 Pro and trails 6,000mAh rivals in endurance.
The 5,270mAh battery (EU) is plenty for a full day of moderate use — described as absolutely wicked all-day life.
It's a downgrade compared to the Magic 6 Pro's 5,600mAh pack; the Asian variant gets a larger ~5,850mAh silicon-carbon cell.
Real-world: 100% at 6am to ~30% by 8pm with 5–6 hours of screen-on time, and ~8–9 hours of gaming SOT.
In an extreme multi-task drain test against the vivo X200 Pro, OnePlus 13 and Find X8 Pro it fell behind, with the smaller battery the limiting factor.
Charging is very fast — ~100W wired fills it in about 30 minutes (in-box charger), plus 80W wireless in ~45 minutes.
Honor's 100W spec lands closer to ~60W with most third-party adapters, though the supplied charger delivers the headline speed.
Oppo Find X9 Ultra
A genuine highlight: a 7,050mAh silicon-carbon cell that posts some of the best endurance numbers of any 2026 flagship, with fast 100W wired and 50W wireless charging.
Draws power from a 7,050mAh battery — a sizeable increase over the previous generation — with 100W SuperVOOC wired and 50W AirVOOC wireless charging.
Earned an active-use battery score of over 20 hours; with the SuperVOOC charger it went 0–75% in 30 minutes and to full in 45 minutes.
After ~10 hours of continuous use starting at 7am it still had 53% battery, regularly getting 8–9 hours of screen-on time and ~40% left after a 13-hour day.
A PCMark synthetic loop returned 15 hours 2 minutes, and 100W SuperVOOC charging took ~49–52 minutes (the charger isn't included).
With moderate usage you can easily expect more than 2 days of battery life — Oppo finally feels like a truly complete product.
Software & AI
Honor Magic 7 Pro
An AI-heavy MagicOS with class-leading 7-year support and useful gesture features — though some feel Honor didn't add 'something special', a gap updates have narrowed.
Honor's Magic phones get 7 years of OS and software support under the new Alpha Plan strategy — class-leading for the price.
This year Honor paid more attention to the software with welcome polish.
A knuckle-circle gesture lets you highlight and drag content into apps or search instead of taking screenshots or copy-pasting.
It feels like Honor didn't invest enough time in the software of this beautiful phone — it lacks the 'something special' rivals have.
Software updates have since added useful capability, including connecting the Magic 7 Pro to an iPhone to transfer files, photos and videos.
Oppo Find X9 Ultra
ColorOS 16 has matured a lot and is fast and smooth, but it still trails Samsung and Google on AI depth and feels iOS-derived to some — the phone's clearest weak point relative to its hardware.
ColorOS 16 feels like one of the best versions yet.
It's a good Android experience but not on par with the Galaxy experience for AI features and tool integration, and portrait autofocus struggles in some low-light conditions.
For me it's the best version of Android I've ever used — light, fast and smooth with no major issues.
The hardware is superior to the latest Samsung, but the software feels like an imitation of iOS.
With a bit of tweaking and updates, Oppo's software and camera engineers can make this even better — there's clear headroom.
Value vs Competition
Honor Magic 7 Pro
One of the best phones of 2025 — and an outright steal at its frequent ~35%-off pricing against Samsung, Apple and the Chinese flagships.
Steep discounts make it easy to recommend — around £730 directly from Honor, roughly a 35% saving on the £1,100 list price.
It's one of the best phones tested in 2025 so far, and the long 7-year software commitment strengthens the case.
Honor has every incentive to be aggressive on price and features — to stand out as a flagship option it really has to, and it does.
A powerful camera smartphone with lots of features — a versatile all-rounder rather than a one-trick flagship.
You get an incredibly versatile camera, impressive stamina, speedy charging, silky performance and an excellent display in one package.
Oppo Find X9 Ultra
Premium-priced and hard to buy in many markets, but reviewers broadly conclude it out-cameras the S26 Ultra and Pixel and edges the Vivo X300 Ultra on usability.
Its main compromises are the ~€1,699 price, large 236g body, occasional software concerns and limited availability in some markets.
It feels like Oppo wanted to make the camera first and just happened to also create the best Android phone you can get right now — though it won't win every year-end award.
The base Find X9 Ultra starts at 7,499 yuan in China — roughly £814 / ~$1,100 — but the heaviness and visual pressure are the first impression.
The closest rival is the Vivo X300 Ultra, but the X9 Ultra wins by having a more user-friendly OS.
The Hasselblad alliance delivers a phone that genuinely challenges the Galaxy S26 Ultra on cameras.
The ultrawide is probably the weakest part of the setup — with the first three cameras taking so much space, Oppo reused the Samsung GN5 sensor here.
Night-mode processing — color, contrast and exposure handling — is so much better than the Galaxy S26 Ultra's, and the ultrawide is now one of the best for detail preservation.
The optional 300mm Hasselblad teleconverter delivers ~13x (300mm) optical-feel zoom that retains real telephoto sharpness, extending to ~60x (1380mm).
Charges 0–100% in about 52 minutes on the official 80W charger in a head-to-head charge test.