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

Here’s another look at Huawei’s futuristic folding phone

Add as a preferred source on Google
Unfolding the Huawei Mate Xs 2.
Huawei Mate Xs 2 Andy Boxall / Digital Trends

Remember the Huawei foldable phone that leaked only a week ago? Another image has hit the web, further driving home the likely reality of this device and its billfold-like design. The difference? Last week, the leaked image showed the phone open. Today’s image shows it folded, with three distinct sections that make it unconventional even by foldable phone standards.

The leak comes courtesy of WhyLab on the Chinese website Weibo (spotted by GSMArena). Huawei executive Richard Yu used the phone in both images. When folded, the phone looks to be around the same size as a standard iPhone, although it does have a notably large camera block that resembles the camera on the Huawei Mate lineup.

Recommended Videos

These pictures have spread like wildfire through social media and leave us wanting more. Digital Trends’ own Andy Boxall calculated the price to be at least $2,780 — on par with the original Huawei Mate X – but bear in mind that this is all speculation, albeit speculation born of experience and prior precedent.

Images of Huawei's triple-fold foldable.
WhyLab

And as Boxall reminds us in his original story, looks can be deceiving. Although the initial image makes the device appear unusually thick, prototype builds are often housed in ungainly housing that both protects and obfuscates the final design.

Unfortunately, that’s where the news stops. While there is a lot of debate as to whether these are truly leaks (versus an intentional guerilla marketing campaign), one fact can’t be denied. Unless you’re willing to import this phone from China, the chances of it being available in the U.S. are slim to none due to trade sanctions.

A spy shot photo possibly showing an unreleased Huawei folding phone.
Digital Chat Station

We can make a few more guesses about the phone’s content. For example, there’s a better-than-average chance this phone will utilize the silicon-carbon battery technology that’s already been adopted by several other Chinese smartphone companies, including Honor. This battery means more efficient energy usage and faster charging times.

The triple-folding phone doesn’t even have a prototype name yet, but the fact it’s been spotted in the wild is a good indicator that it might soon be ready for release (or at least ready for a press conference to satisfy our curiosity). With the Huawei Mate 70 series scheduled for a fourth-quarter release, we probably won’t have to wait long to find out more.

Patrick Hearn
Former Technology Writer
Patrick has written about tech for more than 15 years and isn't slowing down anytime soon. With previous clients ranging from…
YouTube Music playlists are getting new sorting options, and it’s about time
But the rollout is gradual so not everyone will see them right away.
youtube-music-app-super-mix.

If you have ever scrolled through a YouTube Music playlist wishing you could just sort it alphabetically, we have some good news! YouTube Music is rolling out new sorting options for playlists, and yes, it has only taken about a decade.

As first spotted by PiunikaWeb, users are now seeing three new sorting options: Title, Artist, and Album, in addition to the four existing options: Manual, Top Voted, Newest First, and Oldest First.

Read more
Oppo’s Bubble is the fun MagSafe accessory Apple still refuses to make
This tiny selfie screen is MagSafe accessory phones badly need
Oppo Bubble official images with the AMOLED display

Oppo has launched a new phone accessory in China called the Oppo Bubble, and it's surprisingly versatile. It functions like a selfie tool, while also being a tiny rear display, a playful phone add-on, and a fun accessory in general. All of this would have it dominate tech TikTok a few years ago.

Announced alongside the Reno 16 series, the Bubble is a compact magnetic circular display that attaches to the back of supported Oppo smartphones. The tiny gadget basically acts like a secondary screen that helps in taking better selfies, which is honestly handy. It is small, light, and customizable, while also upgrading your selfies or group photos thanks to the better rear cameras. You'd usually have to guess the framing with your rear cameras, but this just makes it work.

Read more
A developer built Quick Share from scratch for phones Google forgot, and it actually works
Bada gives the millions of Android devices locked out of Google's Quick Share a working file-sharing solution.
Electronics, Phone, Mobile Phone

Google's Quick Share is the kind of feature you don't think about until the day you need it and your phone simply doesn't have it. Huawei device owners live in that reality permanently, given that they don’t have access to Google Play services, and so does anyone running the Chinese regional build of Android. 

However, a developer with the handle Kyujin-cho just published an open-source Android app called Bada on GitHub that seems to solve exactly this problem. It does so by implementing Google's own Quick Share protocol from scratch, circumventing the lack of Google Play Services.

Read more