- Reno 16: 6.32-inch OLED display, Dimensity 8550, 6700 mAh battery
- Reno 16 Pro: 6.78-inch display, Dimensity 9500s, 7000 mAh battery, wireless charging
- Both models: 200 MP main camera, 50 MP ultrawide, 50 MP periscope telephoto, intelligent LED flash
- Memory options: up to 16 GB of RAM and 1 TB of storage
The battery figures are the kind that get attention for all the right reasons. A 7000 mAh cell in the Pro version is unusually large, and wireless charging makes it look less like a battery brick and more like a phone people might actually want to carry every day. The smaller Reno 16 still lands at 6700 mAh, which is hardly modest.
Why Oppo is leaning on camera hardware
Oppo’s play here is familiar but effective: make the non-flagship feel expensive. In a market where many brands save the best zoom hardware for ultra-premium models, offering a periscope lens on both phones is a neat way to blur the line between ”value” and ”aspirational.” The Bubble mirror accessory for selfies suggests Oppo is also thinking about the social media crowd, not just spec-sheet obsessives.
The company says the Reno 16 series will come in different memory configurations, new color options, and launch in China on May 25. The remaining question is whether buyers will care more about those camera numbers or the actual day-to-day experience, because 200 MP looks great in a slide deck but battery life, tuning, and software usually decide whether a phone earns a second look.
Oppo has pulled the wraps off the Reno 16 series ahead of its May 25 launch in China, and the pitch is simple: both phones get the same headline camera hardware, while the Pro model adds a bigger display, a faster chip, and a larger battery. The Oppo Reno 16 and Reno 16 Pro are also said to share a 200 MP main camera, which is the standout feature of the lineup. Midrange phones usually cut corners on the camera stack; Oppo is doing the opposite and hoping shoppers notice.
Both the Reno 16 and Reno 16 Pro are said to use a 200 MP main camera, a 50 MP ultrawide lens, and a 50 MP periscope telephoto camera, plus an intelligent LED flash. That is a very aggressive spec sheet for a line that still sits below Oppo’s flagship tier, and it puts pressure on rivals that usually reserve periscope zoom for pricier phones.
Oppo Reno 16 vs Reno 16 Pro specs
- Reno 16: 6.32-inch OLED display, Dimensity 8550, 6700 mAh battery
- Reno 16 Pro: 6.78-inch display, Dimensity 9500s, 7000 mAh battery, wireless charging
- Both models: 200 MP main camera, 50 MP ultrawide, 50 MP periscope telephoto, intelligent LED flash
- Memory options: up to 16 GB of RAM and 1 TB of storage
The battery figures are the kind that get attention for all the right reasons. A 7000 mAh cell in the Pro version is unusually large, and wireless charging makes it look less like a battery brick and more like a phone people might actually want to carry every day. The smaller Reno 16 still lands at 6700 mAh, which is hardly modest.
Why Oppo is leaning on camera hardware
Oppo’s play here is familiar but effective: make the non-flagship feel expensive. In a market where many brands save the best zoom hardware for ultra-premium models, offering a periscope lens on both phones is a neat way to blur the line between ”value” and ”aspirational.” The Bubble mirror accessory for selfies suggests Oppo is also thinking about the social media crowd, not just spec-sheet obsessives.
The company says the Reno 16 series will come in different memory configurations, new color options, and launch in China on May 25. The remaining question is whether buyers will care more about those camera numbers or the actual day-to-day experience, because 200 MP looks great in a slide deck but battery life, tuning, and software usually decide whether a phone earns a second look.

