Mobile World Congress is back, and thankfully, so is the weirdness.
HONOR leaned into spectacle this year, pairing product announcements with a show that blurred the line between technology demo and performance art. Alongside keynotes for the HONOR Magic V6 foldable flagship and the HONOR MagicPad 4, the company unveiled the HONOR Robot Phone, a device that isn’t just smart, but physically moves, reacts, and tracks motion.
SEE ALSO: HONOR Magic V6 first impressions: A ruggedized foldable built for (travel) chaos
Oh, and they brought a life-sized humanoid machine that moonwalked to Imagine Dragons’ Believer just to set the mood.
Before diving into the handset itself, the brand rolled out a bipedal humanoid robot that danced across the stage, nailed a gymnast-level flip, and shook hands with HONOR Chief Executive Officer James Li. It was a massive flex — and on the industry’s biggest platform, no less — part of its new “Alpha Plan” to shift intelligence from the cloud and into physical hardware. Sure, the dancing bot got everyone’s attention at first, but it was its much smaller sibling that really had the show floor buzzing.
A gimbal in your pocket
Enter the HONOR Robot Phone. Dubbed a “new species of smartphone,” this isn’t merely a slab with a fancy camera. Tucked inside the chassis is a mechanized arm housing a 200-megapixel sensor. HONOR engineered an ultra-compact, three-axis mechanical gimbal, reportedly the smallest four degrees-of-freedom setup in the industry, using custom micro-motors. When activated, the shooter physically pops out, spins, tilts and locks onto its subject.
Think of it as having an action camera like the DJI Osmo Pocket fused into your daily driver. Whether pacing around a kitchen during a video call or shooting a solo vlog, the lens actively follows your face. It even comes with an AI SpinShot feature, allowing for buttery-smooth 90-degree and 180-degree cinematic pans without requiring you to move. And thanks to a partnership with cinema legend ARRI, the resulting color science is tuned to look less like a grainy webcam and more like a movie.
Take a look at the HONOR Robot Phone!
The HONOR Robot Phone isn’t just a utilitarian tool, either. It uses expressive body language to interact. Ask the onboard assistant a question, and the motorized head might nod in agreement, shake side to side, or rhythmically bob to whatever music is playing.
Here’s the catch: The demo on the show floor was strictly a “look, but don’t touch” affair. Members of the media were kept behind ropes. They watched it perform its mechanical gymnastics, but the actual hardware was locked down tight. As such, its exact specifications remain a mystery. There’s no official word yet on which Qualcomm Snapdragon chipset is running the show, how big the battery is, or what the display resolution looks like.
The ultimate B-cam for creators?
For vloggers and videographers especially, the HONOR Robot Phone feels like a glimpse of the future. It could become the ultimate B-cam — or even C-cam — for grabbing tight, awkward angles that a bulky rig simply can’t reach. And because it’s a smartphone with advanced artificial-intelligence capabilities, it has the potential to unlock a whole new playbook of creative tricks. Features such as AI-driven subject prediction and instant reframing go beyond what today’s standalone action cameras can deliver natively.
Silicon and stamina
Pulling all this off requires a powerhouse processor. It doesn’t just need the raw horsepower to capture data-heavy video formats; it has to edit them, too. The entire pitch is leaving your laptop at home. To truly replace a creator’s workflow, the HONOR Robot Phone must deliver the muscle to cut, edit, and render large, high-bitrate footage directly on the unit without stuttering or overheating.
But running a mobile editing bay is only half the battle because you also have to keep it alive. Capturing cinematic, ARRI-tuned footage requires a physically huge camera sensor to soak up light, and processing those high-bitrate files is notoriously demanding. Add in the power draw of firing custom micro-motors to spin, tilt, and track your face in real time. That combination of mechanical movement, continuous AI processing, and heavy-duty rendering is likely to be a battery killer.
If HONOR expects vloggers to shoot and edit on the go without being tethered to a power bank, this device will need a substantial battery. That raises the question of how thick and heavy the final commercial unit will be to house all that juice.
Tech influencers’ first impressions of the HONOR Robot Phone
Final thoughts
Unlike most concept phones that quietly fade in a research and development lab, this one is actually headed to market. HONOR confirmed the Robot Phone will see a commercial rollout in China during the second half of 2026.
In an era when ultra-premium mobile devices risk feeling stagnant, the company is betting that the future isn’t just a brighter screen, a bigger battery, or more raw power. Sometimes, you want your tech to look right back at you — and maybe wink every once in a while.


