Honor Magic 8 Pro Air vs OnePlus 15T | TechTalkTown
Honor Magic 8 Pro Air vs OnePlus 15T
Honor Magic 8 Pro Air
Honor
8.4
Beats the iPhone Air at its game
OnePlus 15T
OnePlus
8.2
Compact battery champion
Honor Magic 8 Pro Air
What Reviewers Agree On
Astonishing engineering: a 6.1mm, ~155g body that still fits a triple camera, stereo speakers, ultrasonic fingerprint sensor and IP68/IP69
Comprehensively beats the iPhone Air — bigger battery, more cameras, stereo speakers, real zoom, lower price
Class-leading battery for an ultra-slim phone: a 5,500mAh silicon-carbon cell delivering ~5–6 hours of screen-on time and easily a full day
Fast 80W wired charging (~0–100% in 45–54 minutes) plus 50W wireless and reverse wireless
Very bright 6.31-inch 120Hz OLED — ~1,400 nits real-world auto, headline 6,000-nit local peak — readable in any light
Pros & Cons
Honor Magic 8 Pro Air
Pros
Astonishing engineering: a 6.1mm, ~155g body that still fits a triple camera, stereo speakers, ultrasonic fingerprint sensor and IP68/IP69
Comprehensively beats the iPhone Air — bigger battery, more cameras, stereo speakers, real zoom, lower price
Class-leading battery for an ultra-slim phone: a 5,500mAh silicon-carbon cell delivering ~5–6 hours of screen-on time and easily a full day
Fast 80W wired charging (~0–100% in 45–54 minutes) plus 50W wireless and reverse wireless
Very bright 6.31-inch 120Hz OLED — ~1,400 nits real-world auto, headline 6,000-nit local peak — readable in any light
Detailed Comparison
Design & Build
Honor Magic 8 Pro Air
An engineering showcase — one of the thinnest, lightest premium phones ever — wrapped in a design that openly copies the iPhone. IP68/IP69 and an ultrasonic fingerprint sensor survive the diet.
Weighs just 155g and measures only 6.1mm thick — about 10g lighter than the iPhone Air — with an aerospace-grade aluminium frame and a 0.4mm glass back that still feels premium.
A bold iPhone clone, but still a brilliant smartphone — the Apple-derived design shouldn't distract from a strong overall package.
It keeps a metal mid-frame, ultrasonic fingerprint sensor, a full triple camera, physical SIM plus dual eSIM and IP68/IP69 in the 6.1mm body — and is noticeably smaller all round than the iPhone Air.
Some independent measurements put it closer to 6.5mm / 160g rather than the advertised 6.1mm / 155g.
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Capable triple camera (50MP main + OIS, 50MP ultrawide, 64MP 74mm periscope) that punches above ultra-thin expectations
Standout 50MP selfie camera with 4K60 front video, still uncommon on 2026 flagships
Deal Breakers
Real thermal limits in a 6.1mm body — 3DMark Lifestyle Extreme often crashes mid-test with an overheating warning, and sustained performance drops to ~55% with temps ~48°C
A blatantly derivative iPhone-clone design that won't be for everyone
MagicOS still isn't fully polished and some camera/video behaviour (e.g. disabled 60fps video) is inconsistent
Limited or no official availability outside China; importing means no local warranty
OnePlus 15T
What Reviewers Agree On
The 7,500 mAh silicon-carbon 'Glacier' battery is unprecedented in a 6.32-inch body and delivers roughly 1.5 days of real-world endurance — easily the longest battery life in the compact-flagship class.
Build quality is genuine flagship-grade: metal frame, IP66/IP68/IP69/IP69K dust + water resistance, ultrasonic in-display fingerprint sensor, and a 91% screen-to-body ratio with ~1.1 mm symmetric bezels.
The 6.32-inch 165 Hz 1.5K AMOLED reaches the advertised 1,800 nits in standard measurement and is marketed up to 3,600 nits peak — making it the only true 165 Hz compact-flagship display on the market.
Snapdragon 8 Elite Gen 5 + 16GB LPDDR5X Ultra Pro RAM hits Geekbench multi-core ~10,976 and 3DMark Wild Life Unlimited ~29,901 — top-tier flagship synthetic performance in a sub-200g chassis.
100W wired SuperVOOC and 50W wireless charging mean even the giant battery refills fast.
The new 3.5x periscope telephoto with OIS is a meaningful step up from the OnePlus 13T's limited 2x zoom and is well-suited to portraits at the classic 85 mm focal length.
Deal Breakers
China-only launch with no confirmed global release — ColorOS instead of OxygenOS, no eSIM support, no WearOS support, and missing European LTE band 20 and band 32 make it a compromise outside China.
Notebookcheck measured pronounced sustained-performance throttling of over 50% in 3DMark stress tests, with surface temperatures climbing past 46 °C; SuperSaf hit 50 °C on the back during Wildlife Extreme and saw scores drop from 6,990 to 3,743 inside a single loop.
No ultrawide camera at all — the 'triple camera' is just main + 16MP front + 3.5x periscope telephoto, which is a downgrade versus the OnePlus 15 for anyone who shoots landscapes, group photos or wide-angle video.
Charging port is still USB 2.0 in 2026, which SuperSaf calls 'a choice and not a good one' on a flagship-tier device at this price.
No built-in MagSafe-style magnets — wireless-charging accessories require a separate magnetic case to align properly.
Capable triple camera (50MP main + OIS, 50MP ultrawide, 64MP 74mm periscope) that punches above ultra-thin expectations
Standout 50MP selfie camera with 4K60 front video, still uncommon on 2026 flagships
Cons
Real thermal limits in a 6.1mm body — 3DMark Lifestyle Extreme often crashes mid-test with an overheating warning, and sustained performance drops to ~55% with temps ~48°C
A blatantly derivative iPhone-clone design that won't be for everyone
MagicOS still isn't fully polished and some camera/video behaviour (e.g. disabled 60fps video) is inconsistent
Limited or no official availability outside China; importing means no local warranty
OnePlus 15T
Pros
The 7,500 mAh silicon-carbon 'Glacier' battery is unprecedented in a 6.32-inch body and delivers roughly 1.5 days of real-world endurance — easily the longest battery life in the compact-flagship class.
Build quality is genuine flagship-grade: metal frame, IP66/IP68/IP69/IP69K dust + water resistance, ultrasonic in-display fingerprint sensor, and a 91% screen-to-body ratio with ~1.1 mm symmetric bezels.
The 6.32-inch 165 Hz 1.5K AMOLED reaches the advertised 1,800 nits in standard measurement and is marketed up to 3,600 nits peak — making it the only true 165 Hz compact-flagship display on the market.
Snapdragon 8 Elite Gen 5 + 16GB LPDDR5X Ultra Pro RAM hits Geekbench multi-core ~10,976 and 3DMark Wild Life Unlimited ~29,901 — top-tier flagship synthetic performance in a sub-200g chassis.
100W wired SuperVOOC and 50W wireless charging mean even the giant battery refills fast.
The new 3.5x periscope telephoto with OIS is a meaningful step up from the OnePlus 13T's limited 2x zoom and is well-suited to portraits at the classic 85 mm focal length.
Cons
China-only launch with no confirmed global release — ColorOS instead of OxygenOS, no eSIM support, no WearOS support, and missing European LTE band 20 and band 32 make it a compromise outside China.
Notebookcheck measured pronounced sustained-performance throttling of over 50% in 3DMark stress tests, with surface temperatures climbing past 46 °C; SuperSaf hit 50 °C on the back during Wildlife Extreme and saw scores drop from 6,990 to 3,743 inside a single loop.
No ultrawide camera at all — the 'triple camera' is just main + 16MP front + 3.5x periscope telephoto, which is a downgrade versus the OnePlus 15 for anyone who shoots landscapes, group photos or wide-angle video.
Charging port is still USB 2.0 in 2026, which SuperSaf calls 'a choice and not a good one' on a flagship-tier device at this price.
No built-in MagSafe-style magnets — wireless-charging accessories require a separate magnetic case to align properly.
If I wanted an iPhone I would buy one — the design copying is a turn-off for some.
OnePlus 15T
OnePlus inherits the design language of the OnePlus 15 — metal frame, glass back, micro-arc oxidation finish on the rails — and shrinks it into a 6.32-inch, 194g body that's roughly iPhone 17-sized but with more than twice the battery capacity. IP66/IP68/IP69/IP69K rating, ultrasonic fingerprint sensor and ~1.1mm symmetric bezels are unambiguous flagship moves. Reviewers debate whether 6.32-inch genuinely counts as compact in 2026.
Same premium design as the OnePlus 15 — metal frame, glass back, IP69 water resistance — feels high-quality in the hand at just 194g.
Dimensions and weight are similar to an iPhone 17, but the 15T packs more than twice the battery capacity with a ~91% screen-to-body ratio.
Full-level water resistance and a fast ultrasonic fingerprint sensor make the 15T noticeably more confident outdoors than the OnePlus 13T was.
The metal frame uses a micro-arc oxidation process with a 50/50 weight distribution — it doesn't feel top-heavy and one-handed use is genuinely comfortable.
The pure cocoa colorway is OnePlus's first-ever brown finish and stands out next to the standard 15's black/violet/sandstorm options.
Calling a 6.32-inch phone 'compact' just normalizes the new baseline — at this size the only thing keeping it small is OnePlus refusing to make the body any larger, not any genuine effort to shrink the footprint.
r/gadgets commenters reject the compact framing outright — '6.3" screen is NOT compact' is the top reply on the official-first-look thread, with multiple users asking for a true 5.x-inch option.
Display
Honor Magic 8 Pro Air
A 6.31-inch 120Hz OLED with a headline 6,000-nit local peak. Real-world brightness is more modest but still excellent, and it's comfortable for the eyes.
6.31-inch OLED at 120Hz with Dolby Vision and up to 6,000 nits of peak brightness.
In real-world testing manual max brightness reached ~800 nits, with roughly 5,400 nits only at a 10% window size — the 6,000-nit figure is a small-window peak.
Hit a whopping 1,426 nits in automatic mode (the highest measured to date) and a solid sustained 789 nits in manual mode.
Super bright even in direct sunlight; the cameras, though not quite on par with pricier flagships, are very good indeed.
OnePlus 15T
The 6.32-inch 165 Hz 1.5K AMOLED panel is the only true 165 Hz compact-flagship display on the market and pairs that refresh rate with a measured 1,800 nits brightness, 460 ppi pixel density, Crystal Shield Glass, and HDR10+/Dolby Vision support. Native 165 Hz support in popular FPS games is a real differentiator. Notebookcheck flags 120.7 Hz PWM dimming that can cause eyestrain for sensitive users.
The 6.32-inch 165 Hz AMOLED panel achieves a very good 460 ppi pixel density and the advertised maximum brightness of 1,800 nits in standard measurement.
Display sharpness is plenty competent — sharp, smooth, and easily one of the strongest spec sheets you can get on a compact phone.
Native 165 Hz support in COD, Delta Force and Peacekeeper Elite makes this the only small-screen flagship pushing a full 165 Hz gaming experience.
OnePlus claims up to 3,600 nits peak brightness — even on a playground in direct sunlight you can still see everything clearly, no squinting required.
Specifications confirm a 6.32-inch 1.5K (1216 × 2640) resolution with 165 Hz refresh — a configuration unique to the 15T in the compact class.
Display backlight flickers at just 120.7 Hz under PWM dimming — low enough that the flickering may cause eyestrain and headaches for sensitive users after extended use.
Performance
Honor Magic 8 Pro Air
The MediaTek Dimensity 9500 is genuinely flagship-class for everyday use and short gaming, but the 6.1mm chassis has real thermal headroom limits under sustained synthetic load.
Runs the Dimensity 9500 — a flagship chip on TSMC's 3nm process — and performs as expected at the higher end in Geekbench.
It couldn't complete the full 20-cycle 3DMark Lifestyle Extreme test — crashing after ~5–6 cycles with an overheating warning — a real concern under heavy load.
In a stress test it dropped to ~55% of peak performance with temperatures climbing to ~48°C — thermal headroom is limited.
Honor of Kings held a steady 118–120fps at max graphics even during intense team fights; League of Legends Mobile held 120fps for 30 minutes using just 8% battery.
Thermal management keeps performance consistent and getting over 60fps in GFXBench's demanding 4K test is an excellent result — a real engineering achievement in a 6.1mm body.
OnePlus 15T
Snapdragon 8 Elite Gen 5 paired with 12-16GB LPDDR5X Ultra Pro RAM delivers flagship synthetic scores — Notebookcheck recorded Geekbench multi-core 10,976 and 3DMark Wild Life Unlimited 29,901, on par with the larger Xiaomi 17 and Honor Magic8 Pro Air. The problem is sustained: in the 3DMark Wild Life stress test the GPU drops over 50% and the back of the phone hits 50 °C, which both Notebookcheck and SuperSaf flag as a deal-breaker for long gaming sessions.
Geekbench 6 multi-core hits 10,976 — flagship-tier and within 1% of the average 8 Elite Gen 5 result, so there is no compromise on the chipset versus larger phones.
3DMark Wild Life Unlimited hits 29,901 — 5% above the 8 Elite Gen 5 average and ahead of the Xiaomi 17 with the same chip.
In the 3DMark stress tests the OnePlus 15T shows a sharp drop in performance of over 50%, which significantly lowers our rating.
Wildlife Extreme stress test scores swung from 6,990 best loop to 3,743 worst loop in a single run — the chart is 'quite a bit of a bumpy ride' and performance mode did nothing to stabilize it.
Surface temperatures hit 48.3 °C on the back during stress testing and continued climbing to 50 °C near the camera bump — about 45 °C internal — which seems to be the phone's thermal limit.
Battery & Charging
Honor Magic 8 Pro Air
The headline achievement: a 5,500mAh silicon-carbon cell in a 6.1mm body that comprehensively out-endures the iPhone Air, with fast 80W wired, 50W wireless and reverse charging.
Fits a 5,500mAh silicon-carbon battery into the 6.1mm body via a 917Wh/L energy density — genuinely impressive for a phone this thin.
After 5 hours of moderate daily use plus a full hour of Honor of Kings there was still 40.2% battery remaining.
Real-world use delivers ~5–6 hours of screen-on time to 20%, and a 4–6:30pm session of 5G, Bluetooth music, ~130 photos and 1.5h navigation dropped the battery just 39%.
The iPhone Air dies after ~9–10 hours, but this still has 18–20% left after 14 hours — stereo speakers, a real zoom lens and a 5,500mAh cell vs the iPhone's sub-4,000mAh.
80W wired charging hit 22% in 10 minutes, 66% in 30 minutes and a full charge in 54 minutes, plus 50W wireless and reverse wireless.
It includes the industry's thinnest 0.15mm wireless charging coil to support 50W wireless fast charging in this chassis.
OnePlus 15T
This is the section the OnePlus 15T was built to win. The 7,500 mAh silicon-carbon 'Glacier' cell is the largest ever fitted to a true compact phone — 50% bigger than the iPhone 17's pack in a similar footprint. Notebookcheck measured roughly 1.5 days of real-world endurance at 150 cd/m². Wired charging tops out at 100 W, wireless at 50 W. The only friction points are the missing built-in magnets for MagSafe-style alignment and the still-USB-2.0 port.
OnePlus relies on a silicon-carbon-based battery with a large capacity of 7,500 mAh for its mini flagship — in our practical battery test at 150 cd/m² brightness, the 15T achieved an excellent battery life of nearly 1.5 days.
9to5Google's preview confirms the 7,500 mAh cell carries the same 'Glacier' moniker as the OnePlus 15's battery, so the silicon-carbon structure is here too — 200 mAh more than the larger sibling.
Even though the phone keeps the same compact size, it now packs a massive 7,500 mAh battery — to put that into perspective, the iPhone 17 Pro Max only has around 5,000 mAh, and this is a 6.32-inch phone.
Battery life is wild for a phone this size and is actually a hair bigger than the one in the OnePlus 15, which has a noticeably larger footprint.
Software & AI
Honor Magic 8 Pro Air
MagicOS 10 on Android 16 with a strong 7-year update promise and useful AI, but it's the package's least-polished element and feels iOS-derived.
Ships with MagicOS 10 on Android 16 and Honor promises 7 years of Android version updates — a big plus for a Chinese flagship.
MagicOS wins as the most-improved UI, and the nano-crystal-shield display claims better drop resistance than competitors.
The Honor Magic 8 line continues pairing stunning screens with excellent cameras, but it still can't quite nail the software.
Honor disabling 60fps video on this phone — when other devices with the same chipset enable it — is an odd, avoidable software limitation.
The AI image system basically does what Apple Intelligence promised — hold up the phone and it tells you what you're looking at.
OnePlus 15T
The OnePlus 15T ships with ColorOS 16 on Android 16 in China rather than the global OxygenOS, though the two skins are now nearly identical in feel. Update commitments are unclear — OnePlus doesn't publish a timeline for Chinese-market hardware, and even the global OnePlus 15 only commits to 4 years of major Android upgrades. Mind Space (AI-powered productivity vault) and Gemini integration are the headline software features.
ColorOS 16 comes pre-installed on the 15T instead of OxygenOS — but the differences are minor overall, with German language and Android Auto supported, though no WearOS watches or eSIMs.
There are question marks over the duration of the updates provided — the manufacturer does not usually provide any information on this for China, though typically a OnePlus 15-class phone should receive security updates for six years.
OxygenOS 16 (and ColorOS 16 by extension) integrates Gemini with Mind Space — you can ask Gemini about any saved memory and it accesses local content to perform tasks, making it the best on-phone AI integration we have seen.
Mind Space is the headline AI feature — a digital vault that takes a screenshot of important content and saves it as a card with URL, summary, title and hashtags for contextual search.
The system feels incredibly smooth — arguably one of the best experiences you can get on Android right now, with useful features for students like meeting summaries and lecture transcription.
Software-support window is uncertain: OnePlus has not committed to a specific update timeline for the Chinese-market 15T, and the global OnePlus 15 already commits to only 4 years of major Android upgrades — well behind Samsung and Google's 7-year promises.
Software-support window is uncertain: OnePlus has not committed to a specific update timeline for the Chinese-market 15T, and the global OnePlus 15 already commits to only 4 years of major Android upgrades — well behind Samsung and Google's 7-year promises.
Genshin Impact averaged 60.3 fps over 30 minutes at just 3.2 W power draw, with the phone staying cool to the touch — and Peacekeeper Elite pushed 164.5 fps thanks to native 165 Hz support.
r/Android's reviewer thread flags the same thermal issue directly: 'Gets kinda hot, over 50 degrees in the corner. This is with its very heavy throttling.'
100W SuperVOOC wired charging and 50W wireless mean even the huge cell refills fast — getting through two full days on a single charge feels totally realistic.
There is no native magnetic Qi alignment — wireless charging works, but accessories require a separate magnetic case for MagSafe-style snap-on functionality.
r/Android's reaction to the battery is unambiguous — 'Incredible battery life makes the compact smartphone competition pale in comparison' is the actual review-thread headline.
Update commitment trails the competition — even on the global OnePlus 15 the company only promises 4 years of major Android upgrades, well behind Samsung and Google's 7-year commitments.