
Apple
Apple's best Pro Max in years

Nothing
The $499 phone to beat
iPhone 17 Pro Max
iPhone 17 Pro Max
iPhone 17 Pro Max
Apple swapped titanium for a heat-forged 7000-series aluminum unibody, added Ceramic Shield 2 on the front, and stretched the camera bump into a full-width 'plateau.' The two-tone back with its glass MagSafe cutout splits reviewers — some celebrate the function-over-form pivot, others find the design unfinished, the 233g weight unwelcome, and the soft aluminum vulnerable to scratching ('scratchgate'). Cosmic Orange is the headline color and a real departure from years of muted Pro tones.
TechTalkTown may earn a commission from purchases made through links below. As an Amazon Associate I earn from qualifying purchases. This does not influence our reviews. Learn more.
Nothing Phone (4a) Pro
Nothing Phone (4a) Pro
Nothing Phone (4a) Pro
The defining change this generation: a metal unibody that ditches the transparent back for a minimal lower half and a distinctive rectangular camera island, topped by a slimmed-down Glyph Matrix. Reviewers overwhelmingly call it the slimmest, most premium Nothing ever — but the redesign is genuinely polarising, and the IP65 rating is one notch below the flagship norm.
iPhone 17 Pro Max
The 6.9-inch LTPO Super Retina XDR OLED carries over from the 16 Pro Max but gains Ceramic Shield 2 (Apple claims 3x better scratch resistance), a seven-layer anti-reflective coating, and a peak brightness boost from 2,000 to 3,000 nits in sunlight. Nearly every reviewer rates it among the best smartphone displays sold today, with Samsung's S25 Ultra still winning on outright anti-glare and a minority noting that auto-brightness rarely sustains the full peak.
Nothing Phone (4a) Pro
A 6.83-inch 1.5K AMOLED at 144Hz with 2,160Hz PWM dimming — reviewers agree it's the best screen Nothing has built, with realistic outdoor brightness around 1,600 nits. The headline 5,000-nit peak, though, only materialises with special HDR test files; everyday brightness is far lower.
iPhone 17 Pro Max
The Pro Max's 4,823 mAh battery (5,088 mAh on the eSIM-only model) is the largest Apple has ever shipped, and Apple's 39-hour video playback claim is the longest battery life ever on any iPhone. Notebookcheck calls it a battery-life record-setter, Forbes gets 13-14 hours of heavy outdoor use with 20% to spare, and Ars Technica found overnight standby drop minimal. The flip side: GSMArena's web-browsing test actually came in shorter than the 16 Pro Max (a Liquid Glass / iOS 26 issue some suspect), and a heavy r/iphone user reports no meaningful upgrade over a fresh-battery 14 Pro Max. Wired charging finally goes to 40W, wireless to 25W via Qi2 with built-in magnets.
Nothing Phone (4a) Pro
The ~5,080mAh cell reliably gets through a day and endurance improved across all of GSMArena's tests versus the 3a Pro — but it's only an 80mAh bump over last year and looks small next to 6,000–7,000mAh budget rivals. 50W wired charging is the trade-off win; there is no wireless charging at all.
iPhone 17 Pro Max
iOS 26 with Liquid Glass is the biggest visual refresh in years and ships on every iPhone 17 — useful new features include call/message screening and ChatGPT-on-screen integration, but Apple Intelligence remains the consensus weakness. Reviewers from Wired, Trusted Reviews, TechCrunch and 9to5Mac all flag that Siri is still useless, Clean Up can't compete with Google or Samsung's eraser tools, and Apple barely mentioned Intelligence at the launch event. Long-time Android users on Reddit cite the keyboard, lack of a back gesture, and missing data-usage controls as reasons they go back. Apple is expected to provide at least 6 years of updates.
Nothing Phone (4a) Pro
Nothing OS 4.1 on Android 16 is the universal favourite: near-stock AOSP functionality with a distinctive monochrome visual identity, almost no bloatware, and AI that's present but not forced. The one hard reservation is update length — only 3 years of OS upgrades against 6 years of security patches.
iPhone 17 Pro Max
At $1,199 starting (256GB up from 128GB at the same nominal price) the Pro Max is $100 cheaper than the Galaxy S26 Ultra and roughly matches the Pixel 10 Pro XL. Reviewers split on whether the year-over-year jump justifies upgrading from a 15/16 Pro Max — TechCrunch and Tom's Guide say no, the gains aren't compelling; Trusted Reviews, Forbes and Notebookcheck say the cooling + camera + battery combination is the most worthwhile Pro upgrade in years. The hardware is widely called Apple's best Pro Max in years; the software story (iOS 26 bugs, weak Apple Intelligence) is the consistent caveat. Anyone older than a 14 Pro Max will see substantial gains across the board.
Nothing Phone (4a) Pro
At $499 it directly undercuts the experience-per-dollar of the same-priced Pixel 10a and iPhone 17e, and several reviewers would take it over the 10a without hesitation. The closest internal threat is its own cheaper sibling, the standard Phone (4a), which shares the same cameras for $150 less.