I spent time with the Honor Magic8 Pro, and it feels like a muscle car in a sleek tux. It’s unapologetically about power: a top-tier Snapdragon platform, an outrageous peak-brightness display, and one of the largest batteries in any mainstream flagship. My early take is simple—this is among the most powerful phones I’ve used, even if you can’t officially buy it in the US.
Design That Means Business With Premium Durability
Honor leans into premium materials and durability. The aluminum frame is bookended by contoured glass using the company’s NanoCrystal Shield, which Honor claims is 10x more drop-resistant than ordinary glass. The phone is substantial at 6.34 x 2.95 x 0.33 inches and 7.72 ounces, but the softened edges make it comfortable to grip.

It’s rated IP68, IP69, and IP69K—rare for a non-rugged phone. Per IEC 60529, that means full dust protection and resistance to high-pressure, high-temperature water jets. Seeing that level of ingress protection on a flagship that looks this refined is unusual and impressive.
The right edge houses volume, power, and a customizable AI key. In my testing, the AI key launched the camera instantly and doubled as a zoom/focus control. Short, double, and long presses can be remapped within MagicOS to trigger tools like AI Screen Suggestions, AI Photos editing, or AI Memories—or disabled entirely.
A Display That Outshines Rivals in Bright Sunlight
The 6.71-inch OLED is a showstopper. With a 2,808 x 1,256 resolution and a 1–120Hz adaptive refresh, animations look liquid-smooth and text is tack-sharp. Honor quotes a peak HDR brightness of 6,000 nits. For context, recent Apple and Google flagships top out around 3,000 nits in HDR highlights. Brightness perception isn’t linear, so it won’t appear “twice as bright,” but outdoors the panel stays legible where many phones wash out.
The pill-shaped front camera cutout doubles as a notification hub, mirroring the idea popularized on competing devices. It’s a small touch that makes system alerts and music controls feel integrated rather than intrusive.
Triple-Camera Hardware With Range and Strong Zoom
Honor equips a circular module with serious specs: a 50MP main (f/1.6), 50MP ultra-wide (f/2.0), and a 200MP telephoto (f/2.6) offering 3.7x optical zoom with OIS. On paper, that’s a versatile trio designed for speed and reach. In my quick samples, the main sensor grabbed clean detail and consistent exposure, while the telephoto preserved texture better than typical 2–3x shooters at similar distances.
Video support is equally ambitious: up to 4K at 120fps on the rear cameras. Up front, a 50MP selfie camera records at up to 4K60 and supports 3D face unlock. Unlocking was fast in my tests, even in mixed indoor lighting.

Silicon and Battery Built for Endurance and Speed
At the core is Qualcomm’s Snapdragon 8 Elite Gen 5 backed by either 12GB/512GB or 16GB/1TB. The combination is overkill in a good way. I couldn’t trip it up while juggling a graphics-heavy game, background navigation, and camera jumps. Thermal behavior during short, intense bursts stayed controlled; nothing in my early use suggested aggressive throttling.
The 7,100mAh battery is a headline in itself. Most flagships hover near 5,000mAh; Honor goes bigger and pairs it with 100W wired and up to 80W wireless charging via SuperCharge. Some regions include the charging brick in-box. On connectivity, you get Wi-Fi 7, NFC, Bluetooth 6.0, and 5G, plus flexible physical/eSIM combinations.
Software and AI That Add Utility Without Clutter
MagicOS on Android 16 blends transparent UI elements and familiar Settings groupings with a stack of AI tools. AI Memories indexes screenshots and helps surface content later. Optional AI deepfake detection—once downloaded—reflects a wider industry push toward media authenticity checks by phone makers and research labs alike.
The AI key is the most tangible day-one win. Assign it to camera controls and it behaves like a physical pro zoom rocker, which encourages you to shoot more and faster. It’s a small but thoughtful nod to enthusiasts who value tactile shortcuts.
Availability, Pricing, and the Catch for US Buyers
The Magic8 Pro is rolling out in markets including China, Germany, Saudi Arabia, and the UK, in Black, Sky Cyan, and Sunrise Gold. Regional pricing varies; in Saudi Arabia, the 12GB/512GB model is roughly $1,120 and the 16GB/1TB version about $1,306. Honor says there are no US launch plans—an ongoing hurdle for shoppers stateside looking beyond the usual players.
If you can buy it where you live, the pitch is clear: extreme brightness, enormous battery, rapid charging, broad camera coverage, and a performance ceiling that’s hard to hit. In an era when many flagships iterate, the Magic8 Pro swings for the fences—and, from my hands-on time, connects.
