Honor Magic V6 vs Motorola Razr Fold | TechTalkTown
Honor Magic V6 vs Motorola Razr Fold
Honor Magic V6
Honor
8.6
Thinnest foldable, biggest battery
Motorola Razr Fold
Motorola
8.3
Best US book foldable, big battery
Honor Magic V6
What Reviewers Agree On
Among the thinnest, lightest book foldables ever — ~8.75mm folded, ~4.1mm open, ~219g, lighter than an iPhone 17 Pro Max
The largest battery in any foldable: 6,660mAh global (up to 7,150mAh in China) — the first foldable to cross 7,000mAh
Class-leading foldable endurance — ~7h54m full-drain, 69% left after a 5-hour mixed test, topping the foldable battery leaderboard
Best-in-class sustained performance on the Snapdragon 8 Elite Gen 5 — throttles far later than rivals and drains only ~41% in 90 minutes of max load
Outstanding durability: a 2,800 MPa Honor Super Steel 'Luban' hinge, armored screens and IP58/IP59 (IP69) ratings
Pros & Cons
Honor Magic V6
Pros
Among the thinnest, lightest book foldables ever — ~8.75mm folded, ~4.1mm open, ~219g, lighter than an iPhone 17 Pro Max
The largest battery in any foldable: 6,660mAh global (up to 7,150mAh in China) — the first foldable to cross 7,000mAh
Class-leading foldable endurance — ~7h54m full-drain, 69% left after a 5-hour mixed test, topping the foldable battery leaderboard
Best-in-class sustained performance on the Snapdragon 8 Elite Gen 5 — throttles far later than rivals and drains only ~41% in 90 minutes of max load
Outstanding durability: a 2,800 MPa Honor Super Steel 'Luban' hinge, armored screens and IP58/IP59 (IP69) ratings
Detailed Comparison
Design & Build
Honor Magic V6
Honor's signature trick — the thinnest, lightest book foldable — taken further, with a wider candy-bar-like outer screen and a premium feel that survives the diet.
Honor's new foldable is the thinnest yet (though only just) but packs a bigger battery than any before.
The Snow White version measures ~8.75mm folded and ~219g — surprisingly reasonable even compared to standard candy-bar phones — and is lighter than an iPhone 17 Pro Max (233g).
Once unfolded the thickness drops to just ~4.1mm — less than half the thickness of an iPhone 17 Pro Max — with an extremely narrow 1.18mm outer-screen bezel.
Honor went slightly bigger on both displays (7.95-inch inner, 6.52-inch outer), giving the front a wider flagship candy-bar aspect ratio.
Even with the flatter design the phone is still very comfortable to hold, with newly redesigned thinner, lighter haptics, antennas, SIM tray and hinge.
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A genuinely strong camera for a foldable, led by a stabilized 64MP 3x periscope telephoto
Very bright screens — ~2,000 nits outer / ~1,300 nits inner full-screen, >5,000 nits peak — plus fast 80W wired / 66W wireless and a 120W charger in the box
Deal Breakers
Expensive — base ~¥8,999 (~$1,300) and well over $2,000 for top storage, with prices extrapolated from the £1,699 V5
Limited official global availability; most buyers import a Chinese-ROM unit with Google-services friction
The 50MP ultrawide is weak in low light and slightly narrower (15mm) than the previous generation
Honor's MagicOS is built around niche interactions and trails Samsung/Google on foldable software polish
Motorola Razr Fold
What Reviewers Agree On
Best battery life of any notebook-style foldable — roughly 14h31m (16h10m optimized), far ahead of the Galaxy Z Fold 7's ~10h44m
DxOMark's #1 foldable camera (≈164 points, ~8th overall), with a triple 50MP system Motorola made a genuine strength
Standout software — multitasking, laptop mode and a Pixel-meets-Samsung balance reviewers repeatedly praise
Excellent, very bright displays — an 8.1-inch ~6,200-nit inner panel and a 165Hz ~6,000-nit outer screen
Active stylus support (Moto Pen Ultra) that works even on the cover screen, a Z Fold limitation
Undercuts the Galaxy Z Fold 7 by about $100 ($1,899 / £1,799) and includes a case plus a 90W charger in the box
Best book foldable you can actually buy in the US, since the Oppo Find N6 and Honor Magic V6 aren't sold there
Deal Breakers
Uses the non-Elite Snapdragon 8 Gen 5 in a $1,899 flagship — a clear cost-down some reviewers find disappointing
Heavy at 243g (≈28g more than the Galaxy Z Fold 7) and only IP48/IP49 rated, not full IP68
Motorola's poor track record for timely updates, plus a genuine source conflict over whether it gets 7 years or only 3 years of OS updates
Foldable repair costs and Motorola's screen-peeling warranty history are recurring trust concerns
A genuinely strong camera for a foldable, led by a stabilized 64MP 3x periscope telephoto
Very bright screens — ~2,000 nits outer / ~1,300 nits inner full-screen, >5,000 nits peak — plus fast 80W wired / 66W wireless and a 120W charger in the box
Cons
Expensive — base ~¥8,999 (~$1,300) and well over $2,000 for top storage, with prices extrapolated from the £1,699 V5
Limited official global availability; most buyers import a Chinese-ROM unit with Google-services friction
The 50MP ultrawide is weak in low light and slightly narrower (15mm) than the previous generation
Honor's MagicOS is built around niche interactions and trails Samsung/Google on foldable software polish
Motorola Razr Fold
Pros
Best battery life of any notebook-style foldable — roughly 14h31m (16h10m optimized), far ahead of the Galaxy Z Fold 7's ~10h44m
DxOMark's #1 foldable camera (≈164 points, ~8th overall), with a triple 50MP system Motorola made a genuine strength
Standout software — multitasking, laptop mode and a Pixel-meets-Samsung balance reviewers repeatedly praise
Excellent, very bright displays — an 8.1-inch ~6,200-nit inner panel and a 165Hz ~6,000-nit outer screen
Active stylus support (Moto Pen Ultra) that works even on the cover screen, a Z Fold limitation
Undercuts the Galaxy Z Fold 7 by about $100 ($1,899 / £1,799) and includes a case plus a 90W charger in the box
Best book foldable you can actually buy in the US, since the Oppo Find N6 and Honor Magic V6 aren't sold there
Cons
Uses the non-Elite Snapdragon 8 Gen 5 in a $1,899 flagship — a clear cost-down some reviewers find disappointing
Heavy at 243g (≈28g more than the Galaxy Z Fold 7) and only IP48/IP49 rated, not full IP68
Motorola's poor track record for timely updates, plus a genuine source conflict over whether it gets 7 years or only 3 years of OS updates
Foldable repair costs and Motorola's screen-peeling warranty history are recurring trust concerns
Motorola Razr Fold
Motorola's first book-style foldable trades the iconic flip for a Samsung-like book form, with a Material Expressive look, a flat-folding hinge and a notably heavy body.
Motorola's first book-style folding phone is a premium option, not the budget-friendlier alternative the category could use, with a 6,000mAh battery, top-tier chipset and serious camera hardware.
At 243g it's about 28g heavier than the Galaxy Z Fold 7, largely because of the camera array, though it feels balanced and not heavy in the hand.
The design is Google Material Expressive instead of a misguided attempt to match Apple.
Motorola leveraged decades of hinge engineering to pull the screen taut, resulting in a surface that is startlingly flat and masks the crease.
The build feels relatively sturdy with a zero-gap hinge and flush closure, though the soft inner screen still makes dust and dirt a concern.
Displays
Honor Magic V6
Two bright LTPO 2.0 panels — a 6.52-inch outer and 7.95-inch inner — with high real-world brightness, a much-reduced crease and anti-reflective, drop-resistant coatings.
7.95-inch foldable inner screen at up to ~5,000 nits peak and a 6.52-inch outer at up to ~6,000 nits local peak, both 1–120Hz LTPO.
In real-world testing the outer screen reaches ~889 nits manual / >2,080 nits full-screen and the inner ~700 nits manual / ~1,390 nits full-screen, with ~93% brightness uniformity and 4,320Hz PWM dimming.
The new bridge-hinge design significantly reduces crease visibility, making it one of the best in the industry.
The Magic V6's foldable 7.95-inch screen hits 6,000 nits peak versus only 2,500 nits on the Galaxy Z Fold 7.
Motorola Razr Fold
A pair of excellent, exceptionally bright panels — an 8.1-inch inner screen and a fast 165Hz outer screen — though lab tests fall short of Motorola's 6,000-nit headline claims.
Unfolds to a massive 8.1-inch 2K 120Hz inner panel rated ~6,200 nits, with a ~6,000-nit outer screen running at up to 165Hz.
Motorola rates both displays at 6,000 nits peak brightness, but Future Labs tests found the numbers considerably lower.
The 6.6-inch outer display runs 2520×1080 at 165Hz versus the Z Fold 7's slower 120Hz / 2,600-nit panel — a clear advantage.
The inner display gets very bright at up to ~6,200 nits — a very impressive panel few foldables can match.
Cameras
Honor Magic V6
The strongest camera in its foldable class, anchored by a stabilized 64MP 3x periscope. The ultrawide is the weak link, and it still trails the best slab phones on fine detail.
A 50MP main (f/1.6, 1/1.56", OIS), a 64MP 3x periscope telephoto (70mm, f/2.5, OIS) and a 50MP ultrawide (15mm, f/2.2), with CIPA 6.5-stop stabilization.
Despite the thin chassis Honor fitted a 64MP periscope telephoto with 3x optical, OIS and PDAF — very impressive given the narrow dimensions and great for far-off or low-light subjects.
The V5 — and so the V6 — is the closest any manufacturer has come to a flagship camera system in a foldable.
It loses some of the detail the iPhone picks up, and the iPhone's video is just more natural.
The 50MP ultrawide camera is quite weak in low-light conditions.
The 70mm 3x periscope telephoto is very impressive, and the main camera holds up well in low light with balanced contrast and no over-processing.
Motorola Razr Fold
Historically the foldable Achilles heel — but Motorola invested in hardware and software here, and DxOMark ranks it the best camera in any foldable.
DxOMark rates the Razr Fold the #1 camera among foldables — roughly 8th overall across all phones — with a Gold Label.
A 50MP main (f/1.6, OIS), a 50MP ultrawide (12mm, 122° FOV, f/2.0) and a third 50MP camera — all selfies can use the best 50MP main.
This is without question the best Motorola camera I've ever used.
Comes up just short of modern flagships like the iPhone 17 Pro, Find X9 Pro and Xiaomi 17 Ultra, with a DxOMark score of 164 points.
Took it for a street-photography spin and came away genuinely impressed — the camera hardware was what caught attention.
Performance
Honor Magic V6
Snapdragon 8 Elite Gen 5 with the best sustained behaviour in the foldable class — it holds frames far longer than rivals before any throttling.
Powered by the Snapdragon 8 Elite Gen 5, the Magic V6 surpasses the Galaxy Z Fold 7 on performance.
After 5 minutes of sustained load every competitor throttles 30–40%, but the V6 drained just 41% over 90 minutes of max load — best in class — with an AnTuTu sustained score of ~847,000, 18% ahead of second place.
Honor of Kings averaged ~119–120fps at max graphics (3.45–3.65W, ~38–42°C); PUBG Mobile held ~119fps for 30 minutes.
Genshin Impact at ultra/60fps for 30 minutes averaged 59.5fps with minimal fluctuation, the only trade-off being a screen-brightness drop to ~250 nits.
Frame rates begin to throttle after about 10 minutes maxed out, but dropping graphics one notch locks a steady 59.74fps at just 41.5°C.
Motorola Razr Fold
Snapdragon 8 Gen 5 with 16GB RAM — fast for everyday use and surprisingly good in long sessions, but the choice of the non-Elite chip in a $1,899 phone is the headline criticism.
Motorola stuck Qualcomm's excellent Snapdragon 8 Gen 5 (16GB RAM, 512GB) inside its first full-fold flagship.
With a phone this expensive it is a bit disappointing Motorola couldn't go all the way with the Elite chip.
In a 20-minute stress test the Z Fold 7's 8 Elite was ~10% better on the first loop, but the Razr Fold ran better through the 20 minutes and ended ~20% ahead on sustained performance with similar thermals.
Recording 4K120 for a long time makes the Snapdragon CPU run quite hot, though it cools down fairly fast.
The non-Elite chip, 243g weight and IP49 dust rating could be causes for concern, even if the experience is smooth.
Battery & Charging
Honor Magic V6
The headline: the biggest battery ever in a foldable, delivering slab-phone endurance in a 4mm-thin body, with fast wired/wireless charging and a 120W charger in the box.
A 6,660mAh silicon-carbon cell (256/512GB) — the largest ever in a foldable — rising to a 7,150mAh Qinghai Lake battery in the 1TB China model, the first foldable past 7,000mAh.
It lasted 7 hours 54 minutes from full charge to shutdown — over 2 hours longer than most standard phones — and beat the OPPO Find N5 (5h43m) and Vivo X Fold 5 (4h33m).
After a full 5-hour mixed-usage test, 69% remained — securing first place on the foldable 5-hour battery leaderboard — with a Bilibili loop running to 13h23m before death.
Over heavy Lunar New Year use — video, gaming, documents, social — only about 30% of the battery was used per day.
80W wired charging hit ~27% in 15 minutes and a full charge in ~49–55 minutes, plus 66W wireless and an included 120W GaN charger.
More than 7 hours of screen-on time on the inner display alone, easily surpassing 10 hours mixed indoor/outdoor — eliminating battery anxiety.
Motorola Razr Fold
The standout: the largest battery in the book-foldable space delivering class-leading endurance, plus 80W wired charging — three times faster than the Galaxy Z Fold 7.
Lasting an impressive 14 hours 31 minutes, the Razr Fold is officially the best notebook-style foldable for battery life (16h10m with refresh-rate optimized).
The Galaxy Z Fold 7 managed only 10h44m in the same test, with a 4,400mAh battery versus the Razr Fold's 6,000mAh cell.
I found the battery basically impossible to kill in a single day, even with the Fold's hotspot supplying an entire office internet connection over 12 days.
It charges at 80W wired — over three times as fast as the Galaxy Z Fold 7's 25W — plus 50W wireless and 5W reverse, with a 90W charger and a case included in the box.
The 6,000mAh cell is colossal — about 20% larger than the Pixel 10 Pro Fold's — though there's also more display to power.
Durability & Hinge
Honor Magic V6
A genuine strength — Honor's reinforced 'Luban' steel hinge, armored screens and high IP ratings make this one of the toughest foldables available.
The Luban hinge uses self-developed 2,800 MPa shield-grade steel, built so solidly it can grip a thin piece of tissue paper.
Despite the slim profile it adds a hardened structure, an IP69 water/dust rating and the 2,800 MPa Honor Super Steel hinge.
The crease is 44% shallower than the V5's and the inner screen is ~33% more impact-resistant, with IP58 + IP59 protection.
The true black-diamond outer screen has built-in anti-reflective properties and improved scratch resistance, surviving an accidental drop over two weeks of use.
Motorola Razr Fold
A flat-folding stainless-steel hinge and Gorilla Glass Ceramic improve confidence, but IP48/IP49 (not full IP68) and Motorola's foldable repair history temper it.
IP48/IP49 rated — it can handle 1.5m of fresh water for up to 30 minutes, with a Gorilla Glass Ceramic 3 cover and a durable stainless-steel hinge.
Like most foldables it's IP48-rated — a big deal for any phone with so many moving parts — but Motorola's screen-peeling warranty history undermines trust.
The front display's material, crease and risk of black lines from accidental damage make it expensive to repair.
After almost a year an owner reported no issues whatsoever with the crease and brilliant inner-display durability on Motorola's zero-gap-hinge foldables.
Software & AI
Honor Magic V6
MagicOS 10 on Android 16 with a strong 7-year update promise and capable AI, but Honor's good ideas remain built around niche interactions and the imported Chinese ROM adds friction.
Runs Android 16 with MagicOS 10 and a 7-year update commitment; the global version restores the Google home page and Honor AI.
Owning a Chinese-ROM unit means real friction versus a global version — a key consideration since global availability is limited.
MagicOS feels near-identical to Huawei's EMUI down to the icons — familiar to some, derivative to others.
Honor's good software ideas are based on niche interactions — the only thing that takes the experience down a notch.
Motorola Razr Fold
The surprise strength — Motorola's foldable software is widely called the best balance of Pixel simplicity and Samsung multitasking, undercut only by Motorola's update-timeliness history.
Motorola nailed the software — it feels like the perfect middle ground between the Pixel and Samsung approaches to book foldables, with a laptop mode that turns the bottom half into a trackpad.
The Razr Fold is winning me over with something not on the spec sheet — superb multitasking software.
Given Motorola's awful track record for timely updates, you've got to be ready to live with the little launch bugs for a while.
Motorola promises 7 years of Android version and security updates — best-in-class and a huge jump from last year's 3-year commitment.
Counterpoint: Motorola is only committing to 3 years of Android upgrades and 5 years of security patches, so versus Samsung's 7 years it's really no contest.
Value vs Competition
Honor Magic V6
It out-specs the Galaxy Z Fold 7 on nearly every axis, but it's expensive and hard to buy officially in the West — value depends heavily on import pricing and config.
Those who value long battery life, ultra-thin design and maximum durability will find the Magic V6 the more appealing option versus the Galaxy Z Fold 7.
The base version starts at ¥8,999 in China — roughly £973 / ~$1,309 — with top configs far higher; pricing is expected to be expensive like the £1,699 V5.
The Magic V6 beats Samsung to one of the most-requested foldable features.
If the pricing works for you, the Magic V6 is absolutely worth considering.
The Chinese version is typically about 20% cheaper than the global version.
Motorola Razr Fold
At $1,899 it undercuts the Z Fold 7 and is the only premium book foldable many US buyers can actually purchase — value hinges on whether the non-Elite chip and update questions matter to you.
At $1,899.99 / £1,799.99 it undercuts the Galaxy Z Fold 7 by about $100/£100, and the pre-order Moto Pen Ultra bundle adds real value — the sum of its parts is the best foldable on the market.
If you're tired of Samsung-only or have no interest in the Pixel Fold, this may be the best folding phone you can get in the US right now — the Oppo Find N6 and Honor Magic V6 aren't available there.
It could be called a disappointment, especially compared to the Samsung Galaxy Z Fold and Honor Magic V5 — it should have offered something more compelling to stand out.
If Motorola drops the price by even two or three hundred dollars within the first few weeks, this phone suddenly becomes a much stronger contender.
It competes fairly well with the Oppo Find N6, which is amazing to see.