Honor 400 review: A 200 MP main and AI image-to-video on a sub-$450 number-series phone.
A 200 MP camera and a six-year promise.
Honor 400 leads on two fronts rare at $449 — a 200 MP main that crops to a usable 3×, and a six-OS-update commitment that beats every rival in its price band. The Snapdragon 7 Gen 3 is the give-back. For photo-first buyers who keep phones a long time, it is a standout.
01Display
80/10080/100 trails the 82-point cohort average for upper mid-range phones of 2025.
02Camera
80/10080/100 puts it above the 76-point average for upper mid-range phones of 2025.
03Performance
70/10070/100 is one of the weaker performance results among upper mid-range phones of 2025 — 7 points under the average. Check the rows below before buying for this.
04Battery
86/10086/100 — right at the average for upper mid-range phones of 2025.
05Build
76/10076/100 — right at the average for upper mid-range phones of 2025.
06Value
78/10078/100 trails the 80-point cohort average for upper mid-range phones of 2025.
- 200 MP main with 3× lossless crop.
- Six OS updates — best in class for the price.
- 6,000 mAh silicon-carbon in a slim 184 g body.
- Novel AI image-to-video feature.
- Snapdragon 7 Gen 3 is mid-tier.
- Only 12 MP ultrawide.
- 5 W wireless is token.
- MagicOS duplicates Google apps.
How this review is built: every section score, spec row and comparison on this page comes from SpecEagle's tracked catalogue — scores weight measured specs against the 14-phone cohort of upper mid-range devices released around the same time. We don't publish invented lab anecdotes. Spot an error? .