Honor Power2 Leak: 10,080mAh Battery, Dimensity 8500 Specs

A carrier listing leaks Honor Power2 specs ahead of the January 5 launch: a massive 10,080mAh battery, 6.79-inch OLED, Dimensity 8500 chip, 50MP camera, 12GB RAM, 256/512GB storage and possible 80W charging.

Emma Collins Emma Collins . Comments
Honor Power2 Leak: 10,080mAh Battery, Dimensity 8500 Specs

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Honor's next entry in its power-focused lineup has just leaked via a premature carrier listing in China. The Power2 promises a battery-focused upgrade, new internals and a polished OLED display — and it arrives officially on January 5.

Leaked highlights: gargantuan battery and solid mid‑to‑high-end hardware

The carrier listing peels back most of the curtain on the Honor Power2. The headline: a colossal 10,080 mAh battery, a notable jump from last year’s 8,000 mAh in the original Power. That kind of capacity targets users who prioritize multi-day battery life or heavy on-the-go use without constant recharging.

Under the hood the phone reportedly runs MediaTek’s Dimensity 8500 chipset, paired with 12GB of RAM and two storage tiers — 256GB and 512GB. The display is a 6.79-inch OLED panel with a 1200 x 2640 resolution, offering a large canvas for video, games and productivity.

  • Rear cameras: 50MP main + 5MP secondary
  • Selfie camera: 16MP front sensor
  • Battery: 10,080 mAh
  • Dimensions: 162.1 x 76.3 x 7.98 mm; Weight: 216 g
  • Colors: Phantom Black, Snow White, Rising Sun Orange
  • Memory: 12GB RAM; Storage: 256GB / 512GB

Previous leaks and rumors add a few practical details: the Power2 is expected to support 80W wired charging, include an in‑display fingerprint sensor and offer NFC. With a 10,080 mAh battery, 80W charging would help cut recharge times significantly — though expect full charges to still take longer than smaller‑battery phones.

At 216 grams and a slim 7.98 mm thickness, Honor seems to have balanced size and heft pretty well for such a large battery. That weight is reasonable compared with other battery-centric phones, and the three color options give buyers a bit of stylistic choice.

Why does this matter? If the specs hold up, the Honor Power2 slots into a niche for users who want near-legendary battery life without sacrificing a modern OLED display and a respectable chipset. It won’t chase flagship camera benchmarks, but for long-haul usage — commuting, travel, remote work — it could be a very practical pick.

Official confirmation will arrive at Honor’s January 5 unveiling. Until then, this carrier listing gives one of the clearest looks yet at what to expect from the Power2.

Source: gsmarena

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