Skip to main content
  1. Home
  2. Phones
  3. News

I used the OnePlus Nord 6, and now most flagship batteries just feel underambitious

OnePlus' latest mid-ranger reminds me how conservative most flagship phones still are.

Add as a preferred source on Google
OnePlus Nord 6 in hand
Vikhyaat Vivek / Digital Trends

What stayed with me after using the OnePlus Nord 6 was not only the number attached to its battery. It was how weirdly normal the whole phone still felt. A 9,000mAh cell sounds like something that should belong inside a chunky gaming monster or a rugged brick with zero finesse.

So despite its powerbank-like capacity, the Nord 6 is a fairly normal-looking mid-range phone with the kind of battery life that makes a lot of premium flagships look timid.

The absurd part is how normal it still feels

Recommended Videos

The Nord 6 is not some one-note battery gimmick. It would have been much easier to dismiss if the rest of the phone felt compromised, but it does not. You still get a strong AMOLED display, smooth responsiveness, gaming-friendly performance, clean day-to-day software, and battery life that completely changes how you use the device.

You stop checking the percentage. You stop thinking about topping up in the evening. You stop carrying that same low-level charging anxiety that has somehow become normal, even on premium phones. And that is what makes the Nord 6 so striking. OnePlus somehow stuffed what feels like powerbank capacity into a mainstream mid-range phone and still kept it usable, polished, and coherent.

Modern flagships look like they forgot half their batteries

To put that into perspective, Apple’s latest and greatest iPhone 17 Pro Max is powered by a battery with roughly half the capacity of the Nord 6. Yes, Apple still gets strong endurance out of it because its optimization remains excellent. But the Nord 6 makes that whole category of “excellent battery life” sound a lot less impressive.

The Nord 6 basically exposes how modest the flagship market has become. Big brands keep selling battery life as a balancing act. You get good efficiency, all-day use, and maybe enough headroom to make it through a heavy day. Then the Nord 6 crashes through that logic and asks, “Why are premium phones still this restrained about endurance?”

You can realistically expect this phone to last two days with regular use. And honestly, I would happily trade some “premium” in-hand feel if it made my life easier. Most people throw a plastic case on their phones anyway. So, at that point, just give me the phone that does not die.

It fixes a problem most brands have convinced us to accept

Here’s what really stings: the Nord 6 sets a new standard simply by refusing to play along with the old one. Once you stop worrying about your charger, the whole experience changes. While most consumers have been taught to settle for a phone that lasts one outing, the Nord 6 pushes charging downtime so far into the background that it barely feels like part of the equation.

The Nord 6 is not perfect. Its cameras are not the strongest reason to buy it, and it is not the most balanced phone in its class. But when it comes to endurance, it shows a kind of ambition that many premium phones simply do not.

And for roughly $400, embarrassing a giant like the iPhone 17 Pro Max in even one meaningful category is exactly the kind of underdog story I love seeing. It even makes its premium sibling, the OnePlus 15, look a little less impressive.

Vikhyaat Vivek
Vikhyaat Vivek is a tech journalist and reviewer with seven years of experience covering consumer hardware, with a focus on…
Old tech keeps coming back because new tech got annoying and we miss simpler times
Dumb phones, discs, cameras, and retro consoles are cycling back because modern tech got too needy for its own good
Toned picture of retro cassette player and earphones on tabletop.

Old jeans and old sneakers get a pass because fashion is cyclical. One year something looks dead, a few years later it’s back with a better markup and a straight-faced explanation about authenticity.

I’m starting to see consumer tech the same way. The revival isn’t limited to one corner of the junk drawer, either. It’s showing up in phones, cameras, audio gear, movies, and games. A tiny camera dangling from a wrist has more personality than another glass slab taking overprocessed night-mode shots.

Read more
Oppo is building camera phones like the smartphone race never ended
Oppo Find X9 Ultra Back

The flagship smartphone race has become a little too polite, especially when it comes to mobile photography. There was a time when the conversation revolved around megapixel counts, sensor count, and wild zoom numbers. But over the last few years, that energy has cooled.

The biggest brands no longer behave like they are trying to shock the market. Companies like Apple and Samsung now focus more on refining image processing and fine-tuning the formula than on pushing camera hardware into genuinely outrageous territory.

Read more
Despite cutback rumors, Apple could still serve a performance carnival on iPhone 18
The performance gap between Apple's standard and Pro iPhones may shrink dramatically in 2026, and that's genuinely great news for most buyers.
Apple iPhone 17 Pro in Cosmic Orange next to the iPhone 17 Pro Max in Deep Blue

Apple loves keeping critics and reviewers on their toes. While we’ve heard whispers of cost-cutting on the iPhone 18 lineup, fresh supply chain intelligence from Taiwan (via Commercial Times) suggests that the company is cooking up one of its most hardware-centric upgrades in years.

At the core of the purported iPhone 18 lineup sits TSMC’s 2nm A20 chip, which is believed to be a generational leap from the 3nm process A19 series chips on the iPhone 17 and the iPhone 17 Pro models. 

Read more