Honor’s Robot phone is real, and coming later this year


Honor’s Robot phone is real, and coming later this year

The camera nods, dances to music, and tracks faces. The rest of the specs are a secret.

Something unusual happened at Mobile World Congress this year. A device sat in a glass case at the Honor booth in Hall 3,  present, demonstrably functional, performing little robotic gestures for anyone who stopped to watch,  and yet not a single journalist was permitted to pick it up.

That device is the Honor Robot Phone. The company has been teasing it since October last year, and following its formal debut at MWC Barcelona, where CEO James Li took the main stage on 4 March for what Honor described as the company’s first main-stage keynote at the congress, it now has a confirmed release window: the second half of 2026, initially in China.

Whether it ever reaches global markets remains an open question. But the hardware on display in Barcelona is unusual enough to warrant close attention regardless.

A gimbal, shrunk to fit inside a phone

The Robot Phone’s defining feature is a motorised camera arm that folds neatly into the rear of the device when not in use. The arm houses a 200-megapixel sensor mounted within what Honor describes as the industry’s smallest four-degree-of-freedom (4DoF) gimbal system.

honor robot phone-gimbal

Source: Honor

At its heart is a custom micro motor built from titanium alloy, which the company says is 70% smaller than existing micro motors, a reduction it credits directly to engineering knowledge accumulated during years of developing foldable phones.

The result is a three-axis mechanical stabilisation system capable of the kinds of precise camera movement previously associated with dedicated handheld gimbals and professional rigs. Honor has been careful, however, not to overstate the comparison: the system is described as equivalent in stabilisation performance to external stabilisers, not superior to them.

For video specifically, the phone supports a Super Steady mode for high-movement shooting, AI Object Tracking that locks onto and follows subjects with a double-tap, and AI SpinShot for automated 90° and 180° rotational movements. The arm can also rotate a full 360°.

Honor robot AI spinshot

Source: Honor

Honor has partnered with ARRI Image Science, the Austrian manufacturer whose cinema cameras are a fixture on professional film sets, for colour science and cinematic image processing. According to Dr. Benedikt von Lindeiner, VP at ARRI, the collaboration aims to bring qualities like natural colour, highlight roll-off, and depth to mobile imaging.

The part that is harder to explain

Beyond the camera mechanics, Honor has built a set of AI-driven interaction features that are more difficult to categorise. The arm can nod, shake, and tilt in response to voice and touch input, effectively functioning as a physical gesture system. It can detect music and move in time with it.

The camera head can also be made to “sleep” by covering it. During Li’s on-stage presentation, the Robot Phone conducted a scripted exchange with both its CEO and a separate humanoid robot that Honor also unveiled at MWC, a machine that danced to Imagine Dragons’ “Believer,” performed a backflip, and shook hands with Li before the pair left the stage together.

Honor frames all of this under its “Augmented Human Intelligence” vision, a concept Li positioned as AI designed to enhance rather than replace human potential. It is the kind of language that requires scepticism at a trade show, but the hardware at least gives it a concrete anchor.

What we still do not know

The list of undisclosed specifications is significant. Honor has not confirmed which chipset powers the device, how much RAM it will ship with, what the battery capacity is (though the phone uses a silicon-carbon anode cell to support the motor’s energy demands), or what it will cost. No journalist at MWC was permitted to use the device; hands-on coverage is based entirely on demonstration sessions behind glass.

The durability question is the one that keeps surfacing in early coverage. Motorised camera mechanisms have a poor track record in consumer smartphones; they introduce moving parts into a device that gets dropped, shoved into pockets, and exposed to dust.

Honor’s own engineers acknowledge the concern: the company says it applied foldable-phone simulation and materials expertise to the miniaturisation process, but no independent stress testing has been conducted or published.

For now, the Robot Phone is a device that does things no other smartphone does, being shown to journalists who are not permitted to touch it, scheduled to launch in a market that most of those journalists do not primarily cover.

That is either the opening chapter of something genuinely new, or a very controlled preview of something that will look quite different by the time it ships.

The second half of 2026 will tell.

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