Honor Magic V6 Global Rollout Puts Slim Foldables on Notice

Honor has launched the Magic V6 globally starting in Malaysia and Singapore. The slimmest foldable yet packs a 6,660mAh battery, Snapdragon 8 Elite Gen 5, IP68/IP69 ratings and bright LTPO displays. Its rapid iteration and cross-platform tools position it strongly against Samsung and potential Apple rivals. The device sets a new bar for practical premium foldables.
Honor Magic V6 Global Rollout Puts Slim Foldables on Notice
Written by Lucas Greene

Honor has begun its global rollout of the Magic V6. The book-style foldable, first shown at MWC in March, now reaches markets beyond China. Malaysia and Singapore started pre-orders today. Europe follows soon. The timing feels deliberate. And the specs back up the ambition.

At 8.75mm thick when folded and just 4.0mm unfolded, it claims the title of the slimmest foldable on the market. Weight sits at 219 grams for the white variant. Those numbers matter in a segment where bulk still deters many buyers. Android Authority highlighted exactly that edge in its coverage of the international launch.

The battery grabs attention too. A 6,660mAh silicon-carbon cell powers the device in global trim. Honor calls it the largest ever fitted inside a foldable smartphone. In China variants push even higher to 7,150mAh. Either way the phone earned TÜV Rheinland’s 24-hour battery life certification. Foldable battery anxiety fades here. Real-world endurance stands out as a genuine differentiator.

But thinness and stamina alone don’t win. The hinge tells part of the story. Honor’s Super Steel design rates at 2,800MPa tensile strength. It survived tests with 40kg loads. AI bionic cushioning protects the mechanism further. Durability ratings reach IP68 and IP69. Add NanoCrystal Shield glass with 5,600 layers. This isn’t delicate hardware. It feels built for daily punishment.

Displays impress on paper. The inner 7.95-inch LTPO 2.0 panel hits 5,000 nits peak brightness. The 6.52-inch cover display reaches 6,000 nits. Both support 1-120Hz adaptive refresh. Crease depth drops 44 percent from the prior model. Ultra-thin flexible glass and SGS certification help. Reflectivity falls to 1.5 percent thanks to a silicon nitride anti-reflection stack. 4320Hz PWM dimming and AI Defocus features reduce eye strain. Long sessions become tolerable. Comfort counts in a device meant for extended productivity.

Performance comes from the Snapdragon 8 Elite Gen 5. It’s the first foldable to use the chip. Advanced vapor chamber cooling keeps it in check during heavy tasks. Gaming hits 120fps with Vulkan support. Multitasking flows without hiccups. The processor pairs with up to 16GB RAM and storage options to 1TB. Android 16 runs underneath MagicOS 10. Seven years of upgrades promise longevity.

Cameras follow a capable formula. A 50MP main sensor with OIS leads. A 64MP 3x periscope telephoto and 50MP ultrawide complete the rear trio. Selfies come from a 20MP unit. Software enhancements include Magic Color 2.0, AI Image to Video 2.0, and an AI Color Engine. These features aim to lift everyday shots rather than chase pure hardware supremacy.

AI integration runs deeper. Gemini gets three months of free Pro access. MagicOS tools focus on productivity. HONOR Share works across iOS devices. Quick Share and Honor Connect let the phone play nice with Apple Watch notifications and macOS file transfers. The strategy feels smart. Many foldable buyers already live in mixed ecosystems. Honor avoids forcing a full switch.

Launch history adds context. The Magic V5 arrived in China during July 2025. Global audiences saw it later. Now the V6 appears roughly six months after that debut. Forbes reported an Honor executive explaining the choice. “The current situation and moment is indeed a very special period of time in terms of the competition. MWC is a very important global platform, and with all the innovators and influencers to be there. So we think it’s a good platform to announce Magic V6 innovation to the public.” Visibility trumped a longer wait. The move also positions Honor ahead of Samsung’s next foldable and any Apple entry.

Pricing in Malaysia starts at RM7,699, roughly $1,918. That aligns closely with the V5’s £1,799 tag in some markets. Early buyers of the previous model might feel the quick succession. Yet no features were stripped. The value proposition holds. GSMArena detailed the China pricing and larger local batteries upon that debut. Global customers get strong specs without waiting for a stripped-down version.

Recent coverage confirms momentum. Today’s rollout news spread quickly on X. Malaysian and Singaporean pre-orders went live. European launches loom. GSMArena noted the expansion into Europe, Middle East, Africa and additional regions later this month and beyond. The company clearly wants broader presence after years of China focus.

Competitors face pressure. Samsung’s Galaxy Z Fold series long defined the category. Oppo and Vivo push similar designs in Asia. Honor now matches or exceeds them in thinness, battery size and durability ratings. The 6,660mAh cell in such a slim body stands out. Engineering trade-offs usually force compromises. Here Honor appears to have minimized them.

Of course questions remain. Real-world crease visibility, long-term hinge reliability and camera consistency need extended testing. Battery life claims sound strong on paper. Actual mixed-use results will decide if the TÜV certification translates to user satisfaction. Software polish on MagicOS 10 also matters. Foldables demand flawless app adaptation and multitasking gestures.

Still the overall package impresses. Honor didn’t chase novelty for its own sake. It targeted the pain points. Thickness. Weight. Endurance. These factors kept many professionals from adopting foldables. The Magic V6 directly addresses them.

Availability details matter too. Initial waves hit Southeast Asia first. That gives Honor time to refine supply and gather feedback before bigger markets. The delayed full global push, originally hinted for second half of 2026, has accelerated. Recent reports show faster rollout than some expected. Honor’s own MWC page framed the device as a benchmark for AI-era foldables. The claim holds weight given the silicon-carbon battery and on-device AI tools.

Industry watchers note the pace. One generation every six months raises eyebrows. It risks annoying early adopters. Yet it also signals aggressive iteration. Honor wants to own the conversation around what a premium foldable should be. Slim. Long-lasting. Capable across work and play. Integrated with whatever phone ecosystem the buyer already chose.

The Magic V6 doesn’t try to replace a laptop. It doesn’t pretend to outshoot dedicated cameras. Instead it refines the foldable formula with measurable gains in the areas that matter most for daily carry. That focus could prove more effective than headline-grabbing firsts.

As pre-orders begin in new markets, the test shifts from stage demos to user hands. If battery life delivers, if the hinge holds up, if the displays feel premium in varied lighting, Honor stands to gain significant share. The global rollout has started. The conversation around foldable leadership just grew more interesting.

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