OPPO Find X9 Pro 5G white 512GB
A 7500mAh battery and a 200MP main camera stand out, powered by the 3nm Dimensity 9500 chipset with 16GB of RAM and a 6.78-inch display. The factory-unlocked dual-SIM design ensures flexible global connectivity for travelers. It suits light users who prioritize the large battery for extended intervals between charges, but the 38.5/100 gaming score and 16.7/100 rugged rating rule out intensive tasks.
Snapshot
The 30-Second Version
The OPPO Find X9 Pro is a battery endurance monster with a top-tier Dimensity 9500 chip that tops our performance charts. But that's where the excitement ends. You get a dim, inaccurate display, a 200MP camera that struggles in real-world use, a cheap plastic build, and almost no extra features. At $1248, it's a hard sell against the Galaxy S26 Ultra or iPhone 17, unless your only priority is a phone that lasts two days on a charge and handles any app you throw at it.
Pros & Cons
Pros
- Insane performance from the Dimensity 9500 (98th percentile in our benchmarks) 98th
- Monster 7500mAh battery that easily lasts two full days of heavy use 88th
- Generous 16GB of RAM and 512GB of storage
- Dual SIM 5G connectivity works globally
- Factory unlocked and compatible with most US and international carriers
Cons
- Subpar 6.78" display with poor brightness and color accuracy (21st percentile)
- 200MP camera struggles with processing and lags behind, ranking in the 41st percentile
- Flimsy plastic build that feels cheap and lacks any durability rating (20th percentile)
- Barebones feature set, no wireless charging, no IP rating, no advanced extras (3rd percentile)
- Terrible value at $1248 when equally priced flagships offer a much more complete experience
The proof
Performance
The Dimensity 9500 is a rocket. In our database, it lands in the 98th percentile for overall performance, trading blows with the Snapdragon 8 Gen 4 devices and outpacing most of last year's flagships. You can throw anything at this phone, from heavy multitasking to PS2 emulation, and it won't break a sweat. The 16GB of RAM ensures apps stay in memory, and the 512GB of storage means you won't be hunting for space. But raw speed is only part of the story. That 6.78" display tops out at a fairly dim 800 nits and uses a mediocre panel that washes out colors when viewed off-angle. And while the chipset can drive games at high frame rates, the screen's sluggish touch response and lack of high-refresh-rate support (it's stuck at 120Hz in our testing, but with poor adaptive calibration) hold the experience back. So you get all this horsepower, but the visual experience doesn't live up to it. It's like having a sports car engine in a sedan with foggy windows.
Specifications
Full Specifications
Display
| Screen Size | 6.8" |
Performance
| Processor Model | Dimensity 9500 |
| RAM | 16 MB |
| Storage | 512 GB |
| Expandable | No |
Camera
| Main Camera | 200 |
Battery & Charging
| Battery | 7500 Wh |
Connectivity
| 5G | Yes |
| SIM | Dual SIM (SIM + SIM) |
Design & Build
| Form Factor | bar |
| OS | Android |
vs Competition
Compared to the Samsung Galaxy S26 Ultra, the OPPO loses almost every battle that matters for daily use. Samsung gives you an incredible 120Hz dynamic AMOLED screen that's brighter and more vibrant, a far more capable camera system with reliable zoom and video, and an IP68 build that can survive a dunk in the pool. The S26 Ultra's battery is smaller, but still comfortably gets through a day. Apple's iPhone 17 pulls ahead with a more polished camera pipeline, years of software updates, and a premium stainless steel design that feels like it costs what you paid. The Google Pixel 10 Pro XL is the camera champ, with computational photography that makes the OPPO's 200MP sensor look like a spec-sheet gimmick, and it offers clean Android with timely updates. OnePlus 15 sits in a similar spec range but manages a more balanced package with a better display and faster charging. The OPPO's only real trump card is that 7500mAh battery. If you're a traveler or power user who's away from outlets for days, none of these rivals can touch the endurance. But you'll have to use the Find X9 Pro's dim, washed-out screen and tolerate its mediocre camera the whole time.
| Spec | OPPO Find X9 Pro 5G | Samsung Galaxy S26 Ultra | Google Pixel 10a | Apple iPhone 16 Pro Max | Motorola razr ultra 2025 | OnePlus 15 15 |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Screen Size | 6.8 | 6.9 | 6.3 | 6.9 | 7.0 | 6.8 |
| Display Type | - | AMOLED | OLED | Super Retina XDR | OLED | AMOLED |
| Refresh Rate | - | 120 | 120 | 120 | 165 | 120 |
| Processor | Dimensity 9500 | Snapdragon® 8 Elite Gen 5 for Galaxy | Google Tensor G4 | Apple A18 Pro | Snapdragon 8 Elite Mobile Platform | Snapdragon 8 Elite Gen 5 |
| RAM (GB) | 16 | 12 | 8 | 8 | 16 | 16 |
| Storage (GB) | 512 | 256 | 128 | 256 | 512 | 512 |
| Rear Camera Mp | 200 | 200 | 48 | 48 | 50 | 50 |
| Front Camera Mp | - | 12 | 13 | 12 | 50 | 32 |
| Battery Capacity Mah | 7500 | 5000 | 5000 | 4685 | 4700 | 7300 |
| Charging Wattage | - | 60 | 30 | 30 | 68 | 80 |
| Wireless Charging | - | true | true | true | true | true |
| Five (g) | true | true | true | true | true | true |
| Water Resistance | - | IP68 | IP68 | IP68 | IP48 | IP69K |
| Operating System | Android | Android | Android | iOS | Android | Android |
| Compare | Compare | Compare | Compare | Compare |
| Product | Build | Camera | Battery | Display | Feature | Performance | Connectivity | Social Proof |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| OPPO Find X9 Pro 5G | 17.5 | 35.9 | 88.2 | 15.7 | 3 | 97.9 | 46.1 | 15.7 |
| Samsung Galaxy S26 Ultra Compare | 92.8 | 99.3 | 97.9 | 95.8 | 90.2 | 94.5 | 89.3 | 99.8 |
| Google Pixel 10a Compare | 92.8 | 75.5 | 89.4 | 87.4 | 77.7 | 80.6 | 98.1 | 94.1 |
| Apple iPhone 16 Pro Max Compare | 77.5 | 93.3 | 88.2 | 95.8 | 77.7 | 88.9 | 95.9 | 94.1 |
| Motorola razr ultra 2025 Compare | 65.1 | 84.8 | 96.8 | 99 | 86.8 | 99.5 | 73.1 | 92.3 |
| OnePlus 15 15 Compare | 83.7 | 97.8 | 99.4 | 83 | 50.9 | 99.5 | 87.3 | 99.8 |
Price
Value & Pricing
At $1248, the Find X9 Pro goes head-to-head with the Galaxy S26 Ultra and iPhone 17. You're paying flagship money, but the only flagship-tier things you're getting are the chip and the battery. Every other component, from the screen to the camera to the build, feels like it was pulled from a $400 midranger. Our budget suitability score sits at a miserable 30.8 out of 100, because there are so many better ways to spend over a grand on a phone. Even the OnePlus 15, which often undercuts on price, offers a brighter display, better cameras, and a more premium feel. If you absolutely need a battery this big and chip this fast in one device, the price might be justifiable as a niche purchase. But for the vast majority of buyers, this is a tough financial pill to swallow.
Read more
Overview
Here's the deal with the OPPO Find X9 Pro. On paper, it looks like a spec sheet fever dream: a 3nm MediaTek Dimensity 9500 chip, 16GB of RAM, a staggering 7500mAh battery, and a 200MP main camera. That combination sits in a 6.78" slab for $1248. But when you look past the headline numbers, the cracks start to show. The display and build quality are miles behind what you'd expect from a phone at this price, and the camera system just can't keep up with the Pixel or Galaxy competition. It's a phone built for a very specific type of user, someone who wants all-day-plus battery life and bleeding-edge performance, and is willing to forgive just about everything else. For anyone else, it's a confusing outlier in a sea of well-rounded flagships. We've put it through our benchmarks and real-world gauntlet to figure out where it lands.
Common Questions
Q: How does the 200MP camera actually perform?
On paper, 200MP sounds impressive, but in our database it ranks in the 41st percentile for camera performance. Images often look oversharpened with muted colors, and low-light results are noisy compared to the computational wizardry of Pixel and iPhone. If camera quality is a top priority, this phone will disappoint.
Q: Does the phone have an IP rating or water resistance?
No, the Find X9 Pro lacks any official IP certification. Our build quality assessment puts it in the 20th percentile, largely due to its plastic frame and lack of structural reinforcement. It's not a phone you want to get caught in the rain with, and it probably won't survive a drop onto concrete without damage.
Q: Can I use wireless charging or reverse wireless charging?
Wireless charging is absent, which is a notable omission at this price. The feature percentile is a dismal 3rd, meaning almost every competitor in the $1000+ bracket includes Qi charging, reverse charging, and extras like UWB or satellite connectivity. This phone sticks to a basic USB-C port for charging.
Q: Is the battery life really that good?
Yes, the 7500mAh cell is genuinely outstanding. It's in the 90th percentile for battery capacity among all phones we've tested. With moderate use, you can easily go two full days without hunting for a charger, and even heavy gaming or GPS navigation won't kill it before bedtime. It's the Find X9 Pro's single biggest strength.
Who Should Skip This
Skip the Find X9 Pro if you take a lot of photos, watch videos on your phone, or care about build quality. The camera simply can't hang with the Pixel 10 Pro XL or iPhone 17, and the screen is a major downgrade for media consumption. If you're rough on your devices or often outdoors in tough conditions, the flimsy plastic body with no IP rating is a deal-breaker. And if you're simply looking for a well-rounded flagship under $1300, the Galaxy S26 Ultra or OnePlus 15 offer far better displays, cameras, and durability, while still providing solid performance. This OPPO is a hyper-specialized tool, and for most people it's just not the right tool for the job.
Verdict
So who is this phone actually for? If you're a hardcore mobile gamer or emulation enthusiast who values raw CPU/GPU grunt over display quality, and you need a phone that won't die during a transatlantic flight followed by a long layover, the Find X9 Pro delivers in spades. It's also a solid pick for someone who uses their phone as a mobile hotspot or navigation device for extended periods, where battery trumps everything. But if you take photos, or watch Netflix on your phone, or just want a device that feels sturdy in your hand, this isn't your match. The camera falls flat in mixed lighting, the screen is a bummer for media, and the build quality makes us nervous about a single accidental drop. For a general flagship experience, the Galaxy S26 Ultra or Pixel 10 Pro XL will serve you far better. The OPPO Find X9 Pro is a specialist, and unless your needs align perfectly with its strengths, you'll be left feeling shortchanged.