Battery anxiety is the quiet epidemic of modern smartphones, and OnePlus seems determined to cure it the brute-force way. The upcoming OnePlus N6 packs a colossal 8,000mAh battery — a figure that dwarfs the cells in most flagship handsets and, according to OnePlus, is enough to keep the phone running for up to three days on a single charge.
That’s the headline, but the longevity claim doesn’t stop at daily endurance. OnePlus says the battery should retain at least 80% of its effective capacity after seven years of use. In an era where most of us swap phones long before the half-decade mark, that’s an ambitious promise — and a refreshing nod to the people who keep their devices until they fall apart.
When the tank does eventually run dry, refilling it is handled by 45W wired charging. No wireless charging is mentioned here, but with a battery this large, fast wired top-ups are arguably the more sensible priority.
The rest of the spec sheet suggests OnePlus isn’t treating the N6 as a one-trick endurance machine. The phone features a 6.78-inch 1.5K OLED display running at a smooth 144 Hz refresh rate — a combination that’s genuinely generous for a device aimed at the value-conscious end of the market. Scrolling, gaming and everyday navigation should all feel slick.
Under the hood sits a MediaTek Dimensity 7400 Super chipset, a mid-range processor built to balance everyday performance with efficiency — a logical pairing for a phone whose entire identity revolves around stretching every milliampere.
On the imaging front, OnePlus keeps things straightforward. The N6 carries a 50 MP main camera for its primary shooter, backed by a 16 MP front-facing camera for selfies and video calls. It’s a sensible setup that prioritizes the cameras most people actually use rather than chasing a long list of secondary lenses.
Pulling it all together: a high-refresh OLED panel, a competent mid-range chip, a capable main sensor and, of course, that headline-grabbing 8,000mAh power pack. The N6 reads like a phone designed for users who care less about spec-sheet bragging rights and more about not staring at a battery percentage by mid-afternoon.
OnePlus is set to give the N6 its full unveiling on June 30, 2026. Pricing details for international markets haven’t been confirmed yet, but if the N6 lands in the same affordable territory as its predecessors, it could become a compelling option for anyone tired of living tethered to a charger.