Skip to main content

Honor puts a shiny target on the back of its desirable new 9X phones

Image used with permission by copyright holder

Honor has announced the Honor 9X and Honor 9X Pro. The two new smartphones have currently been unveiled only in China, but the company often goes on to release its new devices internationally. The midrange devices stand out because of a bezel-less screen and a pop-up camera, plus the first outing of Huawei’s new Kirin 810 processor.

The two are ready to do battle with Xiaomi’s Mi 9T/Redmi K20 phones, and here’s what you need to know about them.

Recommended Videos

Like the Honor 20 and Honor 20 Pro, the Honor 9X and 9X Pro share many similarities. First is the overall design — just take a look at that fantastic X shape on the rear panel, which we expect to use the same technique as the Honor View 20’s rear panel, giving it a deep, highly reflective finish. It’s great to see another Honor device family get some much-needed personality, which the Honor 20 range still lacks.

Both the 9X and the 9X Pro use the Kirin 810 processor, about which little is known, other than it’s built using a 7nm process. It’s paired with 4GB or 6GB of RAM inside the 9X, and 8GB of RAM in the 9X Pro. The 9X has a choice of 64GB or 128GB of internal storage, while the 9X Pro has 128GB or 256GB. Both have expansion opportunities using a MicroSD card.

On the front is a 6.59-inch AMOLED screen, but rather than go for a hole-punch selfie camera, the 9X series has an immersive screen without a hole, notch, or sizable bezels. Instead, the 16-megapixel selfie camera is housed inside a pop-up module, just like Xiaomi’s Mi 9T — a phone it’ll go up against — and the more expensive OnePlus 7 Pro.

Camera differences

The differences between the two arrive when examining the rear camera. The Honor 9X has a dual-lens camera with a 48-megapixel main lens and a 2-megapixel secondary depth lens, while the 9X Pro has a three-lens array. The 48-megapixel camera remains, as does the 2-megapixel lens, but it also comes with an 8-megapixel ultra-wide lens. Both phones have 4,000mAh batteries and operate on Android 9.0, and we expect Honor’s own version of Huawei’s EMUI, called Magic UI, to be over the top.

The Honor 9X will be the first to go on sale, with availability beginning on July 23 in China and prices starting at around $200 locally. The Honor 9X Pro will come on July 30 and cost from around $320.

What fate awaits the Honor 9X family globally? While Honor has released the Honor 20 and Honor 20 Lite in several markets, the Honor 20 Pro has still not arrived as promised, raising questions about the potential wider availability of the Honor 9X series. Eventual availability will likely depend on Huawei’s relationship with Google, which is threatened by the U.S.’s blacklisting of the firm. While both phones are listed as using Android, phones released in China do not use any Google services, which means Honor avoids the licensing problems it faces in Europe, the U.K., and other regions where Google services are considered essential. Honor has made no announcement regarding an international release at the time of writing.

Andy Boxall
Andy is a Senior Writer at Digital Trends, where he concentrates on mobile technology, a subject he has written about for…
I put the iPhone’s Dynamic Island on my Pixel 7 Pro — and I can’t go back
The expanded DynamicSpot Dynamic Island at the top of the Pixel 7 Pro.

The Apple iPhone 14 Pro got a big refresh last year, and key to that was a new selfie camera design with a pill-shaped cutout. Only, this is no normal hole -- it's the home of a new feature, the oddly-named "Dynamic Island." It's a notification bubble that lives behind the selfie camera that displays information like music tracks, timers, and anything else you need to know, but don't need a full screen for. If you're playing music on Spotify, it'll display the track name and controls. If someone calls you, it'll show the person's contact information. Waiting for an Uber? It'll show you how far away it is. It's even tied into the Face ID unlock process. It's a great use of the selfie camera — and one with a bright future.

At least, that's what we thought. The Dynamic Island has had a tough start, as app support was extremely limited, meaning it didn't live up to Apple's promises. This persisted for a number of months before the Dynamic Island finally got what it needed to live up to its hype.

Read more
The new Honor Magic 5 Pro smartphone has a truly unusual design
The Honor Magic5 Pro in Meadow Green.

The Magic is back at Honor, with not one but two new Magic-branded smartphones being revealed during MWC 2023. The Honor Magic 5 Pro joins the Honor Magic Vs folding smartphone and is the company’s latest “normal” non-folding flagship.

Like many Honor phones over the years, it’s all about the camera and an unusual design.

Read more
We have the Vivo X90 Pro, one of 2023’s most interesting Android phones
The Vivo X90 Pro held in a person's hand.

The Vivo X90 Pro has arrived, in preparation for our review. If you're not familiar with Vivo, it's part of the same tech empire as OnePlus, Realme, and Oppo — but it's not as closely related as those three are in terms of software, design, and partnerships. It's Vivo's partnership with Zeiss, in addition to a wider global launch for the X90 Pro, that has us intrigued.

Vivo and Zeiss have worked together on smartphone cameras since 2020, with the Vivo X60 Pro and X60 Pro Plus the first devices to come from the partnership. According to Zeiss, the pair work together not on just one component or software feature, but across the entire imaging experience, with the intention of assuring quality throughout. Zeiss doesn’t make cameras, but rather optics for cameras, so it’s different from partnerships like OnePlus and Hasselblad’s, where the focus is software.

Read more