
The HONOR Magic8 Pro leaves a strong and positive first impression.
The Sunrise Gold aluminium frame, which has a slight champagne tinge to it, makes the Magic8 Pro feel sleek and luxe. It’s light and easy to hold with one hand, and the performance is snappy.
MagicOS 10 is lovely to use, and that’s coming from someone who is an iPhone user through and through.
The rear camera array (which includes a 200MP telephoto, a 50MP main, and a 50MP ultra wide) fares well and snaps crisp, true-to-life photos in the sunlight.
In the box, it’s standard fare. You’ll get the HONOR Magic8 Pro, a SIM card pin, and a USB-C to USB-C charger. There’s no phone case or wall charger, unfortunately, so you’ll need to source those yourself. The phone is lightweight and easy to hold, which is surprising, given the 1P68, IP69, and IP69K weather rating, which typically gives phones a bulkier feel.
It’s not overtly slow, which is surprising given the bloatware. Even on first impressions, it's clear that the Qualcomm Snapdragon 8 Elite Gen 5 processor does most of the heavy lifting. The 6.71-inch OLED screen is big and bright, thanks to the Nano Crystal and massive 1,800 nits of peak brightness.
The HONOR Magic8 Pro’s battery life sits at around 7000mAh, with 100W SuperCharge fast charging and 80W wireless charging. It’s already handled an hour-long gaming session with ease, so ideally it’ll keep its cool once more demanding games are introduced.
HONOR’s first big Android phone of 2026 is off to a strong start, and I’m excited to get into the thick of testing to see if it’s a device worth considering.
If the HONOR Magic8 Pro takes your fancy, you can snag it from Shoppee, Lazada, or the official HONOR Singapore website. The 12GB + 512GB storage configuration will set you back $1,499, while the 16GB + 1TB version costs $1,699.
If you'd rather purchase your HONOR Magic8 Pro on a plan, Singtel and M1 both offer it.
However, the best value option is to purchase the device outright and pair it with a cheap SIM-only plan, like one of the below.