Honor Magic 7 Pro vs Samsung Galaxy S26 Ultra | TechTalkTown
Honor Magic 7 Pro vs Samsung Galaxy S26 Ultra
Honor Magic 7 Pro
Honor
8.3
Excellent
Samsung Galaxy S26 Ultra
Samsung
8.3
Great
What Reviewers Agree On
The silicon-carbon 5,850mAh battery with 100W wired charging delivers exceptional battery life and charging speed for the price
Snapdragon 8 Elite performance is top-tier with excellent thermal management in sustained workloads
The 200MP periscope telephoto delivers impressive zoom quality that rivals phones costing significantly more
Price-to-specs ratio is outstanding — comparable to Samsung Galaxy S25 Ultra specs at a much lower price
The display quality with 1,600 nit typical brightness and HDR support is excellent for media and outdoor use
Deal Breakers
Software update commitment of 5 years total is shorter than Samsung's and Google's 7-year promise
Limited availability in the US with no official carrier support
Pros & Cons
Honor Magic 7 Pro
Pros
The silicon-carbon 5,850mAh battery with 100W wired charging delivers exceptional battery life and charging speed for the price
Snapdragon 8 Elite performance is top-tier with excellent thermal management in sustained workloads
The 200MP periscope telephoto delivers impressive zoom quality that rivals phones costing significantly more
Price-to-specs ratio is outstanding — comparable to Samsung Galaxy S25 Ultra specs at a much lower price
The display quality with 1,600 nit typical brightness and HDR support is excellent for media and outdoor use
Cons
Detailed Comparison
Camera
Honor Magic 7 Pro
The triple camera system with 200MP periscope telephoto delivers impressive zoom and versatility, though processing can be inconsistent in challenging conditions.
The 200MP 3x periscope telephoto is the standout feature — it produces sharp, detailed shots at 3x and usable results up to 10x that rival more expensive phones
The 50MP main sensor with f/1.4 aperture captures excellent detail and natural bokeh in good lighting conditions
In challenging mixed lighting, HDR processing can be overly aggressive with occasional skin smoothing that makes portraits look artificially processed
Video at 4K30 is solid but lacks the consistency of Samsung and Apple — frame rate stability can waver in demanding scenes
Samsung Galaxy S26 Ultra
The sensors are unchanged from the S25 Ultra (200 MP main, 50 MP ultrawide, 10 MP 3x telephoto, 50 MP 5x telephoto), but the main gets a wider f/1.4 aperture (up from f/1.7) and the 5x telephoto widens to f/2.9 (from f/3.4). Low-light improves noticeably, and Horizon Lock video stabilization is a new headline feature. The 3x 10 MP sensor is aging and rivals from Oppo, Xiaomi and Honor now pull clearly ahead on absolute image quality.
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MagicOS occasionally shows aggressive battery management that can delay notifications from third-party apps
What Reviewers Agree On
The Privacy Display is a genuinely useful, world-first hardware feature that blacks out the screen from side angles and can be toggled per-app or for notifications only.
The Snapdragon 8 Elite Gen 5 for Galaxy is the fastest mobile chip in an Android phone right now — multi-core Geekbench jumps from ~9,800 on the S25 Ultra to 10,700–11,240, with class-leading sustained gaming.
The switch back to aluminum from titanium makes the phone thinner (7.9 mm) and lighter (214 g), with most reviewers saying it feels better in the hand.
The main 200 MP (now f/1.4) and 5x telephoto (now f/2.9) get real low-light gains from the wider apertures despite the sensors being carried over from the S25 Ultra.
Charging finally gets meaningful gains — 60W wired (up from 45W) and 25W wireless (up from 15W) via Qi 2.2.
Seven years of Android and security updates (through Android 23 / 2033) match the best long-term support window in the industry.
The 6.9-inch 3120x1440 120Hz AMOLED — even with the new pixel structure — remains one of the best displays on any smartphone, with 2,600-nit peak brightness.
Deal Breakers
Samsung stuck with the same 5,000 mAh battery for the sixth consecutive Ultra while OnePlus is shipping 7,500 mAh silicon-carbon cells and Oppo is at 6,270–7,500 mAh — Trusted Reviews, 9to5Google, Engadget and Wired all flag this as the S26 Ultra's weakest point.
There are still no built-in Qi2 magnets — you need a first- or third-party magnetic case to get full-speed 25W wireless charging and MagSafe-style accessories, a compromise Wired, 9to5Google, Ars Technica and Austin Evans call unacceptable in 2026.
The camera sensors are physically unchanged from the S25 Ultra — no new hardware except the wider apertures and a smaller 5x periscope — and Chinese rivals like the Oppo Find X9 Pro and Xiaomi 17 Ultra have clearly overtaken Samsung on absolute image quality.
The new pixel architecture that enables Privacy Display has silently nerfed Samsung's famous anti-reflective coating — both Mrwhosetheboss and SuperSaf confirmed the S26 Ultra reflects more than the S25 Ultra even with Privacy Display switched off.
Most Galaxy AI features — Now Brief, Now Nudge, Photo Assist, agentic automation — are still slow, unreliable or duplicate existing Google and rival-phone features, per Ars Technica, 9to5Mac, The Verge and Wired.
The S Pen silo still has no Bluetooth and the higher-storage tiers quietly jumped to $1,499 (512 GB) and $1,799 (1 TB) — a price hike 9to5Google explicitly calls out.
Software update commitment of 5 years total is shorter than Samsung's and Google's 7-year promise
Limited availability in the US with no official carrier support
MagicOS occasionally shows aggressive battery management that can delay notifications from third-party apps
Samsung Galaxy S26 Ultra
Pros
The Privacy Display is a genuinely useful, world-first hardware feature that blacks out the screen from side angles and can be toggled per-app or for notifications only.
The Snapdragon 8 Elite Gen 5 for Galaxy is the fastest mobile chip in an Android phone right now — multi-core Geekbench jumps from ~9,800 on the S25 Ultra to 10,700–11,240, with class-leading sustained gaming.
The switch back to aluminum from titanium makes the phone thinner (7.9 mm) and lighter (214 g), with most reviewers saying it feels better in the hand.
The main 200 MP (now f/1.4) and 5x telephoto (now f/2.9) get real low-light gains from the wider apertures despite the sensors being carried over from the S25 Ultra.
Charging finally gets meaningful gains — 60W wired (up from 45W) and 25W wireless (up from 15W) via Qi 2.2.
Seven years of Android and security updates (through Android 23 / 2033) match the best long-term support window in the industry.
The 6.9-inch 3120x1440 120Hz AMOLED — even with the new pixel structure — remains one of the best displays on any smartphone, with 2,600-nit peak brightness.
Cons
Samsung stuck with the same 5,000 mAh battery for the sixth consecutive Ultra while OnePlus is shipping 7,500 mAh silicon-carbon cells and Oppo is at 6,270–7,500 mAh — Trusted Reviews, 9to5Google, Engadget and Wired all flag this as the S26 Ultra's weakest point.
There are still no built-in Qi2 magnets — you need a first- or third-party magnetic case to get full-speed 25W wireless charging and MagSafe-style accessories, a compromise Wired, 9to5Google, Ars Technica and Austin Evans call unacceptable in 2026.
The camera sensors are physically unchanged from the S25 Ultra — no new hardware except the wider apertures and a smaller 5x periscope — and Chinese rivals like the Oppo Find X9 Pro and Xiaomi 17 Ultra have clearly overtaken Samsung on absolute image quality.
The new pixel architecture that enables Privacy Display has silently nerfed Samsung's famous anti-reflective coating — both Mrwhosetheboss and SuperSaf confirmed the S26 Ultra reflects more than the S25 Ultra even with Privacy Display switched off.
Most Galaxy AI features — Now Brief, Now Nudge, Photo Assist, agentic automation — are still slow, unreliable or duplicate existing Google and rival-phone features, per Ars Technica, 9to5Mac, The Verge and Wired.
Both the main 200 MP and 5x telephoto get brighter lenses (f/1.7 → f/1.4 and f/3.4 → f/2.9) — a welcome update that especially helps low-light photography.
The S26 Ultra actually beats the Pixel 10 Pro on noise in low-light shots, and even manages to expose a dim Grogu-doll scene better than Google's phone.
Versus the Pixel 10 Pro, Google still maintains faster shutter speeds in 2026, though Samsung's wider aperture helps it keep up with Apple on motion.
Horizon Lock / Super Steady Video automatically corrects up to 360 degrees of rotation, producing dramatically stable footage even when you twist and shake the phone — though it needs plenty of light.
The 10 MP 3x telephoto uses a comparatively smaller sensor and is noticeably weaker than the other lenses — shots in the 3-5x range don't have the same punch.
The core camera setup is starting to feel dated next to the Oppo Find X9 Pro (200 MP zoom, 1/1.56" sensor) and the Xiaomi 17 Ultra (1-inch main sensor) — Samsung's mature processing is the only thing keeping it competitive.
Side-by-side with a Xiaomi 17 Ultra, the Xiaomi has more depth, better facial detail, and less oversharpening — Samsung is falling behind on absolute camera quality.
The 5x telephoto uses a new periscope design with lenses on top of the prism instead of behind it, making the module smaller and the bokeh more pleasant — but extending the minimum focus distance to about 52 cm.
The base S26 ships with essentially the same camera system Samsung has been using since 2023 — four generations, same sensors, just some sprinkled AI on top.
The base S26 shot of a perfect gym photo looks balanced on its own, but next to the Xiaomi 17 Ultra it's obvious what Samsung's oversharpening is replacing — real detail on the face.
Shots from the main sensor are noticeably brighter in low light and processing is sharper with better motion than last year — it's 'completely acceptable, but Samsung is due for some real hardware improvements.'
Performance
Honor Magic 7 Pro
Snapdragon 8 Elite delivers top-tier performance with 12GB RAM, handling everything from gaming to multitasking without breaking a sweat.
Snapdragon 8 Elite performance is identical to Samsung Galaxy S25 Ultra — no compromises despite the lower price tag
Gaming at maximum settings runs smoothly with effective vapor chamber cooling keeping thermals in check during extended sessions
12GB RAM is adequate but some competitors offer 16GB at this tier — heavy multitaskers may notice slightly more aggressive app management
Samsung Galaxy S26 Ultra
The Snapdragon 8 Elite Gen 5 for Galaxy is used worldwide on the Ultra (unlike the base S26 and S26+, which split between Snapdragon and Exynos 2600 by region). Multi-core Geekbench numbers hit 10,713–11,240, with 3DMark stability at 67.6% — a substantial improvement on the S25 Ultra's 58.4%. Sustained gaming improved too thanks to a larger vapor chamber, though Ars Technica still measured about 40% GPU drop under max stress.
Benchmark scores are the highest seen on a smartphone, closely matching the OnePlus 15 that runs the same chip — gameplay is smooth even at max settings in Genshin Impact.
In Geekbench 6 the S26 Ultra hit a multi-core score of 11,240 (up from 9,828 on the S25 Ultra) and a GPU score of 25,403 (up from 19,863) — essentially as fast as an Android phone can get in 2026.
3DMark Wild Life stability hits 67.6% over a 20-minute benchmark — up from the S25 Ultra's 58.4% and beating the Honor Magic 8 Pro (55.4%).
Even under maximum stress the Ultra sheds about 40% of its graphical performance — still faster in games than Google's Pixel phones, but a big chunk to lose.
Opening apps is lightning-quick and the ample RAM easily keeps heavy apps and games in memory — the S26 Ultra is blazing fast all the time, though it damn well better be for $1,300.
The Snapdragon 8 Elite Gen 5's NPU is 39% more powerful than the previous generation, powering the new AI features — CPU is up 19%, GPU up 24%.
The S Pen silo still has no Bluetooth and the higher-storage tiers quietly jumped to $1,499 (512 GB) and $1,799 (1 TB) — a price hike 9to5Google explicitly calls out.