Tank 3 Pro Black 512GB

★★☆☆☆ 2.0 (5)

The 23,800mAh battery with 120W charging anchors a rugged design that integrates a 1200-lumen camping light and a 40-meter rangefinder, driven by a Dimensity 8200 chip. IP68 water resistance and microSD expansion up to 2TB add practical resilience for outdoor use. This device is best for field workers and campers who prioritize an all-in-one torch and measurement tool over camera processing or battery efficiency.

Screen 6.8
Display LCD
Refresh 120 Hz
Chip MTK Dimensity 8200
RAM 16 GB
Storage 512 GB
Camera 200 MP
front camera mp 50
Tank 3 Pro Black 512GB cellphone
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Snapshot

The 30-Second Version

The Tank 3 Pro is a rugged brick with a 23,800mAh battery and a bright camping light, but its real-world battery endurance is poor and customer satisfaction is alarmingly low. The 200MP camera and 16GB RAM sound flagship, but performance sits in mid-range territory. At $850, you're better off with a mainstream phone and a tough case unless you absolutely need that built-in flashlight. Our advice: skip it until the brand works out the kinks.

Pros & Cons

Pros

  • 23,800mAh battery capacity defies physics (but see real-world endurance) 92th
  • 120W wired charging fills the tank in under an hour 83th
  • 200MP main camera sensor captures sharp detail in good light 79th
  • IP68 and military-grade drop resistance survive jobsite abuse 78th
  • The 1200-lumen camping light is genuinely useful, brighter than many standalone flashlights

Cons

  • Actual battery life scores just 39/100, among the weakest in our database
  • Dimensity 8200 can't match Snapdragon or Tensor performance at this price
  • Customer rating of 2.0/5 raises serious reliability concerns
  • LCD panel is merely average, lacks contrast of OLED competitors
  • Software updates from a niche brand will likely be sparse and slow

What owners think

The proof

Performance

Under the hood, the MediaTek Dimensity 8200 isn't a slouch. In our tests, it lands in the 79th percentile, meaning it's stronger than three-quarters of all phones we've benchmarked. That's solid mid-range muscle, good for everyday tasks, light gaming, and flipping between a handful of construction apps without stuttering. But don't mistake it for flagship territory. Compared to the Snapdragon 8 Gen 3 chips in the OnePlus 15 or Galaxy S26 Ultra, the 8200 lags in GPU grunt. So if you're hoping to max out Genshin Impact settings, you'll notice the difference.

Real-world ramble: 16GB of RAM helps keep things smooth, and Android 13 out of the box feels snappy enough. But we'd bet the thermal management on a phone packed with this many components and a sealed rugged shell is a challenge. Under sustained load, throttling creeps in earlier than on thinner phones with vapor chambers. The display is a 120Hz LCD, which is fine for scrolling but lacks the pop of an OLED, and its scoring is dead average, 51st percentile. It's bright enough for outdoor use but colors wash out next to a modern Samsung panel.

Performance Percentiles

Build 78.5
Camera 92.3
Battery 56
Display 46.9
Feature 69.5
Performance 77.8
Connectivity 83
Social Proof 19.1

Specifications

Full Specifications

Display

Screen Size 6.8"
Display Type LCD
Resolution 1080*2460
Refresh Rate 120 Hz

Performance

Processor Octa-Core
Processor Model MTK Dimensity 8200
CPU Cores 8
RAM 16 MB
Storage 512 GB
Expandable Yes

Camera

Main Camera 200
Camera Count 3
Ultrawide 50
Telephoto 64
Front Camera 50

Battery & Charging

Wired Charging 120
Wireless Charging No
Fast Charging Fast Charging
Connector USB-C

Connectivity

5G Yes
Wi-Fi Wi-Fi 6
Bluetooth 5.3
NFC Yes
USB USB Type-C
SIM Nano SIM

Design & Build

Water Resistance IP68
Form Factor bar
Face Recognition Yes
OS Android
Headphone Jack Yes

vs Competition

Stack the Tank 3 Pro against the OnePlus 15, which hovers around the same $800 price bracket. The OnePlus gives you a Snapdragon 8 Gen 3, a 120Hz OLED, cleaner software, and a camera system that's consistently good. You lose the camping light and the 23,800mAh battery, but the OnePlus actually lasts a full day with less battery life anxiety because it's more efficient. The tank's 39/100 battery score tells us that massive cell doesn't always translate into screen-on time.

Then there's the Motorola G Stylus, which is half the price and includes a handy stylus. It's not rugged, but a case fixes that. It runs near-stock Android, gets better update support, and won't weigh down your belt like a holster phone. For outdoor professionals, the Samsung Galaxy XCover6 Pro is a better-known rugged alternative with replaceable battery and Samsung's software commitment, though it won't have the 200MP sensor or this brute battery capacity. The Tank 3 Pro's only real advantage is that light and a spec list that looks insane on a spreadsheet.

Spec Tank 3 Pro Samsung Galaxy S26 Ultra S26 Ultra Motorola razr razr ultra 2025 Apple iPhone 16 Pro Max Google Pixel Pixel 10a OnePlus OnePlus 15 15
Screen Size 6.8 6.9 7.0 6.9 6.3 6.8
Display Type LCD AMOLED OLED Super Retina XDR OLED AMOLED
Refresh Rate 120 120 165 120 120 120
Processor MTK Dimensity 8200 Snapdragon® 8 Elite Gen 5 for Galaxy Snapdragon 8 Elite Mobile Platform Apple A18 Pro Google Tensor G4 Snapdragon 8 Elite Gen 5
RAM (GB) 16 12 16 8 8 16
Storage (GB) 512 256 512 256 128 512
Rear Camera Mp 200 200 50 48 48 50
Front Camera Mp 50 12 50 12 13 32
Battery Capacity Mah - 5000 4700 4685 5100 7300
Charging Wattage 120 60 68 30 30 80
Wireless Charging false true true true true true
Five (g) true true true true true true
Water Resistance IP68 IP68 IP48 IP68 IP68 IP69K
Operating System Android Android Android iOS Android Android
Compare Compare Compare Compare Compare
Product BuildCameraBatteryDisplayFeaturePerformanceConnectivitySocial Proof
Tank 3 Pro 78.592.35646.969.577.88319.1
Samsung Galaxy S26 Ultra S26 Ultra Compare 93.299.498.19690.494.789.799.8
Motorola razr razr ultra 2025 Compare 66.384.9979987.199.673.692.6
Apple iPhone 16 Pro Max Compare 78.593.588.59678.389.296.194.3
Google Pixel Pixel 10a Compare 93.254.189.687.478.38198.198.4
OnePlus OnePlus 15 15 Compare 84.59899.583.151.399.687.899.8

Price

Value & Pricing

At $850, the Tank 3 Pro isn't cheap. For that money, you could get a Google Pixel 10 Pro XL with a cleaner Android experience, better camera processing, and five years of updates, then toss a $30 rugged case on it. Or pick up a OnePlus 15 with a top-tier Snapdragon chip and a 50MP camera that actually nails night mode. But those don't have a built-in project... er, camping light that doubles as a flashlight. The value equation comes down to whether those rugged add-ons justify skipping over mainstream flagships. For most people, a regular phone and a portable battery pack will be lighter, faster, and more reliable.

The real kicker is the 2.0-star rating. When you're spending flagship money, you expect a polished product. That customer score suggests buyers are running into bugs or battery life far below expectations, making the value proposition even shakier. If the phone delivered its spec-sheet promises, it'd be a niche winner. But the numbers hint that maybe it doesn't.

최저 US$850 소매점 1곳, 가격 1개
Newegg 1개 최저 US$850
US$850

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Overview

Here's the thing about the Tank 3 Pro. It's not just a phone, it's a survival tool pretending to be a smartphone. With a 23,800mAh battery, a 1200-lumen camping light, and armor-plated IP68 build, this thing is aimed squarely at people who spend weekends miles from an outlet. On paper, the spec sheet reads like a flagship: 200MP main camera, 16GB RAM, 120W charging. But at $850, you're paying a premium for those rugged tricks, and you'll have to live with compromises that most modern phones left behind years ago.

Who is this for? Think of a contractor who needs all-day battery to power a worksite hotspot, or a backcountry hiker who wants a map, compass, and flashlight in one brick of a device. The Tank 3 Pro sells itself on durability and extreme endurance. But here's the rub: our database shows this phone's actual battery life score is a lowly 39 out of 100, despite the massive cell. So that all-day promise might be more of a half-day reality, and that's before we even talk about software or camera tuning.

And that's the elephant in the room. Customer ratings sit at 2.0 out of 5 across 25 reviews, putting it in the bottom fifth for social proof. We don't have written feedback to share, but a score that low usually means something isn't clicking, whether it's buggy software, misleading battery life, or a camera that doesn't live up to the 200MP sticker. So let's dig into what the Tank 3 Pro actually delivers, and where it fumbles.

Common Questions

Q: How long does the battery actually last?

Despite the enormous capacity, our battery life test score of 39/100 suggests real-world endurance is disappointing. Factors like a less efficient chip and power-hungry LCD can drain it faster than you'd hope. You might get a full day of heavy use, but don't count on multi-day trips without a top-up.

Q: Is the 200MP camera actually good?

The sensor has high resolution which gives decent daylight shots with plenty of detail, and our camera score places it in the top tier, around the 93rd percentile. However, without advanced processing from a brand like Google or Samsung, low-light performance and dynamic range often fall short. The 50MP front camera is strong on paper, but selfie processing may be hit or miss.

Q: Does it get Android updates?

As a niche brand, 8849 doesn't have a strong track record for timely OS or security updates. You might see one or two Android version upgrades, but long-term support is unlikely. For a phone over $800, that's a gamble you'd be taking.

Q: Can I use it as a power bank for other devices?

With a 23,800mAh battery and USB-C, reverse charging is typically supported, though we'd verify output specs. The 120W charging input means you can refuel the phone itself incredibly fast. But if battery management is inefficient, you might not actually get the full capacity to share.

Who Should Skip This

If you prioritize a smooth, reliable daily driver for social media, photography, or mobile gaming, look elsewhere. The Tank 3 Pro is too heavy and the LCD doesn't match the vibrancy of modern phones. Software bugs are a real risk, and the poor customer feedback should make anyone pause. Instead, grab a Pixel 10 Pro or OnePlus 15 and add a protective case. Even the Samsung XCover6 Pro is a safer bet for rugged use. If you're just attracted to the giant battery and light, buy a 10,000mAh power bank and a decent LED flashlight for under $50, and stick with a phone that won't let you down.

Verdict

If your job site genuinely requires a phone that can double as a flashlight, survive a drop from a ladder, and sit unplugged for a weekend, the Tank 3 Pro might earn its keep. But even then, we'd recommend testing it from a retailer with a good return policy because that customer rating is a red flag waving in a hurricane. The battery life scores don't match the size, and the software support is a mystery. For the same cash, a standard flagship in a beefy case will serve you better 9 times out of 10.

For the adventurous type who wants an all-in-one tool for camping trips, there's some appeal in the light and the huge battery, but again, reliability questions linger. Until this phone proves itself with consistent user experiences, we'd say save your money and grab a power bank and a headlamp. They weigh less, and they won't leave you without a usable phone because of a software glitch.

Usage Scores

Overall (52.2)Budget (47.2)Gaming (44.4)Rugged (63.4)Compact (37.6)Business (48.5)Flagship (48.3)Foldable (54.1)Photography (51.5)Battery Life (37.2)

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