Image: Luke Baker

Confirmed: The Oppo Find N6 is the best foldable you can’t have

An almost zero-compromise folding phone

by · Tech Advisor

Oppo has just unveiled its latest flagship foldable, the Find N6, and I was lucky enough to get my hands on it early. I’ve been using it as my main device for the past couple of weeks, and it just might be my favourite folding phone so far.

I’ll rip the band-aid off early. The Find N6 is, sadly, not going to launch in the UK or Europe. Oppo is focusing on Asian markets as well as Australia and New Zealand for this one.

I think that’s a real shame, because after testing it for the last few weeks, this phone has some key advantages that you won’t find anywhere else. It could be the best foldable phone yet.

Where’s the crease?

The most exciting feature, for me at least, is the almost-invisible crease. Of course, Oppo hasn’t beaten physics, and you can still tell where the phone folds, but it’s the least noticeable crease of any folding phone to date.

What makes it even better, though, is that you can barely feel the crease when you run your fingers over it. The progress is all thanks to Oppo’s new Titanium Flexion Hinge, or more accurately, the process it goes through before assembly.

Oppo told us each hinge is 3D scanned with a microscopic level of accuracy. Any uneven areas that are detected are then filled with a liquid 3D printing process and cured with UV light.

The Find N6 is the closest we’ve ever come to a creaseless folding phone, and it’s glorious to use

Most folding phones have a height variance of around 0.2mm on the crease, but after this process, the Find N6 has a variance of just 0.05mm.

Luke Baker

That may be on the technical side, but all you really need to know is that this sci-fi wizardry works. The Find N6 is the closest we’ve ever come to a creaseless folding phone, and it’s glorious to use.

Beautiful yet durable

Last year’s Find N5 pushed the limits with its slimness, essentially kicking off the slim foldable trend for 2025. The Find N6 is entering a very different market to its predecessor, though, and while it is impressively skinny, it can’t quite match the dimensions of the Galaxy Z Fold 7.

This is a foldable that doesn’t feel like it needs to be babied; it’s reassuringly solid on all fronts

That said, I don’t think that’s necessarily a bad thing. The point of making these phones so slim is to make them feel like a normal phone when folded down, and we’ve already achieved that. Going any slimmer just becomes a you-know-what measuring contest.

Luke Baker

Where the Find N6 excels is in how sturdy it feels. This is a foldable that doesn’t feel like it needs to be babied; it’s reassuringly solid on all fronts. This even extends to the flexible glass on the folding display, it’s 50% thicker than the previous generation and has twice the shape recovery.

That’s a difference that you can feel with your fingertips, and while I haven’t tried to leave marks on the display, I can imagine it being much harder to do so. This is more important than ever, as Oppo is releasing a stylus that works with both the inner and outer displays for this model.

Luke Baker

At the launch event, Oppo let us take a look at a test unit that had been folded over 200,000 times. At a glance, it was impossible to notice the difference between it and a brand-new unit.

I did notice that the hinge felt a little springier than a brand-new phone, like it was more keen on being fully open than closed down, but the important thing is that it still worked absolutely fine.

The phone is IP58 and IP59 certified, which means it has the highest possible rating for water-resistance, but it’s not completely dust-tight. That’s perfectly normal for a foldable, but it should be noted that Google’s Pixel 10 Pro Fold bests it on dust resistance, with its IP68 rating (however temporary it may be).

Luke Baker

The Find N6 is available in either Stellar Titanium or Blossom Orange colourways. The former has a slick professional grey finish, while the latter is a louder orange number with golden edges. They both look fantastic, but it’s the orange one that’s really going to turn heads.

Crazy cameras

When choosing a folding phone over a typical bar phone, you have to expect some kind of compromise on the cameras, but Oppo is working to narrow the gap.

On the rear, you’ll find a 50Mp ultrawide (1/2.76-inch), a 200Mp main camera (1/1.56-inch), and a 50Mp 3x telephoto with macro focusing capabilities (1/2.76-inch).

Luke Baker

These sensors are smaller than you’ll find on the likes of the Oppo Find X9 Pro, for instance, but they’re not far behind the likes of the Samsung Galaxy S26 Ultra. So calling them flagship level might not be too much of a stretch.

they benefit from the same Hasselblad tuning and image engine as the X9 Pro

Plus, they benefit from the same Hasselblad tuning and image engine as the X9 Pro. And as you might expect, the results are brilliant, especially when the light is on your side.

The Find N6 is no slouch when it comes to video recording, either. All three rear cameras support Log and Dolby Vision recording at 4K60, while the main camera supports both at 4K120.

An absolute powerhouse

To top it all off, the Oppo Find N6 has the Qualcomm Snapdragon 8 Elite Gen 5 inside. I’ve been playing around with PC emulation on Android using apps like Winlator and GameHub, and I was astonished that I was able to get GTA 5 running at a pretty solid 60fps.

This isn’t something I imagined would be possible just a couple of years ago.

Luke Baker

Needless to say, if you’re playing regular games from the Play Store, this foldable will have no difficulty whatsoever.

It also squeezes a mammoth 6000mAh silicon carbon battery into its tiny frame, which keeps it going all day, and then some. Charging is rapid, too. It supports up to 80W with the right Oppo charger, or 50W with an AirVooc wireless charging pad.

Then, there’s the software. ColorOS makes multitasking more flexible than ever, and I’ve been putting it through its paces writing articles on the go.

You can open up to 4 apps as floating windows, or split the screen into three and seamlessly switch between all of them. It’s easily my favourite multitasking setup.

So, what comes next?

Over the past few weeks, the Oppo Find N6 has become my favourite folding phone. But sadly, unless they’re cool with importing, most of our readers won’t be able to buy one. I truly hope the next generation makes its way to Europe, but in the meantime, there might still be some hope.

Luke Baker

Oppo and OnePlus share a lot of DNA, and the latter has a much larger presence in Europe. The OnePlus Open was very well received internationally, but we never saw a follow-up. Rumours were swirling about a 2025 launch of the Open 2, but then it was confirmed to be delayed, and maybe even cancelled.

If OnePlus does release another folding phone, I wouldn’t be surprised to see it sporting some of the elements that make the Oppo Find N6 so great, but time will tell if that happens.

For now, all we can do is cross our fingers and hope Oppo hears our plea.