OnePlus is set to unveil the OnePlus Ace 6 Ultra in China tomorrow, and the phone has already spilled most of its secrets a day early. A China Telecom certification listing has exposed the model number, display, chip, battery, cameras, and even the build details, which is a pretty tidy way to ruin the suspense before launch.
OnePlus Ace 6 Ultra display, chip and storage variants
The Ace 6 Ultra carries the model number PMB110 and is listed with a 6.78-inch flat LTPS BOE panel, 1.5K resolution, and a 165Hz refresh rate. That puts it squarely in gaming-phone territory, helped by a custom touch-control chip that should keep input lag down when the action gets frantic.
Under the hood, the phone is shown with MediaTek’s Dimensity 9500, identified on the listing as MT6993. Memory and storage options are broad for a non-flagship-branded phone:
- 12GB + 256GB
- 16GB + 256GB
- 12GB + 512GB
- 16GB + 512GB
- 16GB + 1TB
- 6.78-inch flat LTPS BOE display
- 1.5K resolution
- 165Hz refresh rate
- Dimensity 9500 chipset
- Up to 16GB + 1TB storage

OnePlus Ace 6 Ultra cameras, battery and charging
Camera hardware is practical rather than flashy: a 16-megapixel selfie camera, plus a rear setup with a 50-megapixel main sensor using a 1/1.55-inch sensor and an 8-megapixel ultra-wide lens. The bigger headline is the battery, because 8,600mAh is the kind of figure that makes many mainstream phones look underfed.
The battery is a dual-cell unit and supports 120W fast charging. It runs Android 16 out of the box, and security is handled by an in-screen ultrasonic fingerprint scanner.


OnePlus Ace 6 Ultra build, durability and gaming extras
OnePlus is also leaning hard into durability. The phone measures 162.3 x 77.37 x 8.55mm, weighs 218 grams, and is said to use a metal middle frame with a glass-fiber or glass body. It is tipped to carry IP66, IP68, IP69, and IP69K ratings, which is an unusually stacked set of claims for a handset that also wants to be a gaming machine.
Additional features include dual symmetrical 1115W speakers, low-latency gaming optimisations, and support for a dedicated gaming controller accessory. The global question is the awkward one: OnePlus has not said whether the Ace 6 Ultra will leave China, and plenty of China-only performance phones never do.
If that pattern holds, the Ace 6 Ultra will join the long list of Android power phones that look very tempting on paper and slightly annoying in practice. Tomorrow’s launch should confirm whether OnePlus is building a regional gaming monster or just teasing everyone else with a spec sheet they can’t buy.

