Honor Power review: Battery is the whole brief — an 8,000 mAh cell with gaming-grade silicon.
The name says it all.
Honor Power exists for one number — 8,000 mAh — and delivers genuine three-day endurance without becoming a brick, while the Snapdragon 7 Gen 3 keeps games playable. The single useful camera and modest 66 W charging are the give-back. For battery obsessives on a budget, it is purpose-built.
01Display
80/10080/100 — right at the average for mid-range phones of 2025.
02Camera
68/10068/100 trails the 71-point cohort average for mid-range phones of 2025.
03Performance
70/10070/100 — right at the average for mid-range phones of 2025.
04Battery
96/100At 96/100 this is one of the strongest battery showings among mid-range phones of 2025 — 12 points above the cohort average.
05Build
74/10074/100 trails the 76-point cohort average for mid-range phones of 2025.
06Value
82/10082/100 puts it above the 78-point average for mid-range phones of 2025.
- 8,000 mAh in a slim 8 mm body — three-day endurance.
- Snapdragon 7 Gen 3 games above its price.
- 3,000-nit AMOLED.
- Up to 16 GB RAM.
- 2 MP depth filler, no ultrawide.
- IP66 (no full immersion).
- 66 W is modest for the cell size.
- MagicOS quirks.
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 117-phone cohort of mid-range devices released around the same time. We don't publish invented lab anecdotes. Spot an error? .