The OnePlus N6 is trying to win by being sensible, which is a refreshing change from the usual spec-sheet peacocking. A Geekbench listing for the budget phone, model CPH2955, points to MediaTek’s Dimensity 6300 inside, 6GB of RAM, and Android 16 ahead of its India launch on June 30, 2026.
The benchmark numbers are modest rather than exciting: around 780 in single-core and 2,000 in multi-core. That lines up with what the Dimensity 6300 usually delivers, so nobody should expect gaming bragging rights or synthetic benchmark glory here. For everyday use, though, that combination should be fine for browsing, streaming, and the kind of multitasking most people actually do.
Dimensity 6300 and 6GB RAM on Geekbench
The chipset itself is an octa-core part with two Cortex-A76 performance cores clocked up to 2.4 GHz and six Cortex-A55 efficiency cores, plus a Mali-G57 MC2 GPU. In plain English: enough muscle for daily chores, not enough to make flagship phones sweat. That makes sense for a device OnePlus is positioning below the Nord series, where price discipline matters more than benchmark flexing.
There is also a broader trend here. Affordable phones are increasingly being sold on battery life and software polish rather than raw speed, especially as buyers get less interested in incremental camera or display upgrades at the low end. OnePlus seems to be reading that memo correctly, even if it arrives with a little corporate swagger.
8,000 mAh battery and 45W charging
The headline spec is the battery: an 8,000 mAh unit that OnePlus says is the biggest in the ₹15,000-₹25,000 range. The company claims up to three days of typical use, plus battery health lasting for up to seven years, and it backs that with 45W SuperVOOC charging.
- Chipset: MediaTek Dimensity 6300
- RAM: 6GB
- Operating system: Android 16
- Battery: 8,000 mAh
- Charging: 45W SuperVOOC
Launch plans in India
OnePlus will launch the N6 in India on June 30, 2026, in black and green, with Amazon set to carry sales. The missing pieces are still the most interesting ones: display, cameras, and the rest of the hardware sheet. If OnePlus has kept the price tight and the battery claim holds up in real-world use, the N6 could be one of those rare budget phones that people buy for boring reasons and end up loving for exactly that.

