Honor has finally taken the Magic V6 beyond China, starting its global rollout with Malaysia and Singapore before expanding into Europe, the Middle East, and other international markets through June. The Honor Magic V6 is priced at RM 7,699 in Malaysia, with pre-orders running from June 4 through June 11, 2026. The foldable is being pitched as a premium flagship, and the launch timing puts it in the thick of a crowded market where Samsung, Huawei, and Oppo have all spent years trying to convince buyers that folding phones can be more than expensive party tricks.

In Malaysia, early buyers also get gifts worth up to RM 3,797, plus a protection bundle that includes a ”2-Year Worry-Free Quality Assurance” plan and a ”1-Year Worry-Free Crack Protection” warranty. That kind of packaging is doing a lot of work here: it softens the sticker shock and signals that Honor knows foldable buyers are still nervous about durability.

Magic V6 display and battery specs

The hardware is built to impress. The outer display measures 6.52 inches and peaks at 6,000 nits, while the larger 7.95-inch inner screen reaches 5,000 nits. Both panels support adaptive 120Hz refresh rates, which should make the phone feel snappy whether it’s folded or open. Honor pairs that setup with Qualcomm’s Snapdragon 8 Elite Gen 5 and a 6,660mAh silicon-carbon battery, backed by 80W wired charging and 66W wireless charging.

  • Outer display: 6.52 inches, 6,000 nits peak brightness
  • Inner display: 7.95 inches, 5,000 nits peak brightness
  • Refresh rate: adaptive 120Hz on both screens
  • Chipset: Qualcomm Snapdragon 8 Elite Gen 5
  • Battery: 6,660mAh silicon-carbon cell
  • Charging: 80W wired, 66W wireless

Honor Magic V6 AI features and warranty cover

The Magic V6 first launched in China in March and arrives with AI features from both Honor and Google, which is quickly becoming table stakes for premium Android phones. The more interesting part is the bundle around the device: Honor is not just selling specs, it is selling reassurance. In a category where a broken hinge or cracked inner panel can turn a luxury purchase into an expensive regret, that warranty pitch may matter almost as much as the processor.

The phone will be sold in Red, Gold, White, and Black. The next question is whether Honor can translate a strong spec sheet into real traction outside China, where foldables still face a simple problem: impressive numbers are easy to ship, but convincing buyers to trade a familiar slab for a folding screen is the harder sell.

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