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It was when I was playing a round of Balatro that I realized I was using a foldable and not a tablet. With every foldable I used until now, there’s a tiny crease that runs down the middle of the inner panel, and while it isn’t noticeable in regular use, it is evident while gaming.
But that’s not the case with the Find N6; OPPO somehow created a foldable with an entirely-creaseless inner panel, and it’s an absolute delight to use. You’ll still see a crease if you hold the foldable at a certain angle, but it doesn’t inhibit usage of the Find N6 in any way whatsoever, and this gives the device a huge advantage over just about every other foldable available today.
The creaseless design also proves its worth when watching something on the foldable, and most of the time I used the inner panel on the Find N6, it felt like I was using a tablet and not something that folds in half. That is the main differentiator with this foldable; the Find N6 does a better job in this area than the Galaxy Z Fold 7, Pixel 10 Pro Fold, Vivo X Fold 5, Honor Magic V5, and even the Huawei Mate X7.
The 8.12-inch inner OLED panel is one of the biggest of any foldable, and it gets 2,160Hz PWM dimming, increased brightness levels than its predecessor, and Dolby Vision. The outer 6.62-inch OLED panel also gets the same features, with the only difference being greater brightness levels. I like that both panels go down to 1nit — similar to the Find X9 Pro — and it makes using the foldable a lot easier at night.
Color vibrancy is excellent, and I don’t have any problems with the inner or outer panels on the Find N6. The width of the outer panel is just right; it’s still big enough that you can view text comfortably, but it is a smidgen shorter than bar phones. The bezels are even thinner than last generation, and they’re uniform.
OPPO says it overhauled the hinge design to deliver the Zero-Feel Crease design, and the brand used 3D printing to ensure the thousands of tiny parts that make up the hinge are of a uniform height.
The new hinge architecture combined with a new Auto-Smoothing Flex Glass layer that’s designed to prevent deformations allows the Find N6 to have the creaseless panel, and it’s guaranteed to last just as long as any other foldable. In fact, OPPO is so confident in the design that it says other brands won’t be able to deliver a similar creaseless hinge in 2027, much less this year.
That’s why it’s annoying to see that the Find N6 won’t make its way outside Asia. OPPO is launching the foldable globally, but it is limited to select countries in southeast Asia and the UAE — it isn’t coming to the U.K. or any other western country where OPPO has a presence. Look, I’m glad that OPPO is launching it outside China, but it would have been nice to see a broader global rollout considering just how good the foldable is.
Let’s talk about the design a little bit, because OPPO is doing things differently this year. The Find N6 is a smidgen thinner and lighter than last year’s Find N5, and coming in at 225g, it is one of the lightest foldables. It is just 4.2mm when unfolded and 8.93mm when folded, and the rounded edges along with slight bevels around the sides make it highly comfortable to hold.
The second-gen Titanium Flexion Hinge has excellent articulation, and I didn’t see any problems in this area in the two weeks I used the Find N6 as my daily driver. Coming to the materials, the hinge is made out of titanium and stainless steel, with the mid-frame of the foldable built out of an aluminum alloy. Although the Find N6 misses out on IP68 protection, it gets IP58 and IP59 dust and water resistance, giving it a decent amount of resilience.
The camera module is centered, and the design ensures there is no wobble when using the Find N6 on a table — this continues to be a constant source of annoyance with my Galaxy Z Fold 7. You get a side-mounted fingerprint sensor like most devices, and it is fast to authenticate.
What I like the most is the color options this year; the Find N6 is available in a Blossom Orange model, and that’s the one I’m using. It isn’t a bright orange like the iPhone 17 Pro, with the Find N6 instead featuring a pastel hue that looks gorgeous in its own right. I like that the LED flash module also has a hint of orange, and the mid-frame gets a rose gold design, contrasting the orange very well. The positioning of the power and volume buttons is ideal, but the shortcut key is located a little higher up, and it is awkward to access when using the foldable one-handed.
Also great to see is stylus integration; OPPO has a new case bundle that’s launching alongside the Find N6, and it can slot in the new AI Pen stylus. The stylus is on the smaller side, but it’s good enough to jot notes, annotate, or just doodle.
Battery life is another area where the Find N6 holds up incredibly well. The 6,000mAh silicon-carbon battery manages to last all day without any issues, and even with heavy use, I didn’t have to plug in the foldable before the end of the day. It gets the standard 80W charging, but what I like better is the 50W USB PD integration; I use PD chargers daily, so to be able to charge the foldable at 50W is ideal.
Powering the Find N6 is Qualcomm’s latest Snapdragon 8 Elite Gen 5. Like last year, OPPO is using a custom seven-core design, and I didn’t see any issues while playing games or regular daily use. There is noticeable overheating during extended gaming sessions, but that is the case with all Qualcomm-based phones I tested this year, so the Find N6 isn’t an outlier. Coming to storage, the Find N6 is available in a single configuration globally with 16GB of RAM and 512GB of storage.
The Find N6 is using an all-new AI LinkBoost tech that includes the NetworkBoost Chip S1 to deliver better connectivity, but in real-world use, I didn’t see any difference whatsoever. If anything, connectivity wasn’t as good as bar phones; I always get a signal in my home office when using the Find X9 Pro or other flagships, but not with the Find N6. I didn’t have any issues with my home network, but it was annoying that the cellular modem isn’t as effective as what you get on the X9 Pro.
Foldable cameras have gotten much better in the last two years, and the Find N6 has decent upgrades in this area. The foldable gets a new f/1.8 200MPmain camera with a 1/1.56-inch Samsung HP5 imaging sensor and OIS, and it’s joined by an f/2.7 50MP Samsung JN5 tele lens with 3x optical zoom and OIS, and another 50MP JN5 sensor that acts as the wide-angle lens.
The Find N6 retains Hasselblad tuning, and it has the same Lumo imaging engine as the Find X9 Pro. The camera in general is noticeably better than the Find N5; it takes standout photos in daylight situations, and manages to take detailed shots in challenging scenarios. The tweaks to the imaging engine are evident, and it’s safe to say that the Find N6 has one of the best foldable cameras available today.
What I like this year is that the tele and wide-angle lenses are better than their predecessors; while they’re not quite as good as the Find X9, they’re a better sight than what you get on most foldables. Video recording is better too, with all rear cameras able to shoot 4K60 footage in Dolby Vision.
OPPO always did a good job with the software features on its foldables, and the Find N6 continues that trend. The foldable runs Android 16 based on ColorOS 16.0.4, and it gets the usual customizability along with new multitasking features. My favorite addition is Free-Flow Window, which basically lets you resize windows anywhere as needed, and it makes a huge difference.
I had to fill out a visa a week ago, and it was effortless to do so with Chrome, Docs, and Keep running simultaneously, and being able to go into each app and copy data. While I regularly use split-screen multitasking, this mode is just much more convenient to use.
The software itself is pretty great, and I have no issues to point out. ColorOS is quickly becoming my favorite Android skin, and that’s down to the heavy customizability, modern UI, and the unique extras OPPO continues to add to the interface. The Find N6 will get four years of software updates, and while that’s not on the same level as Google and Samsung, it is as high as the brand is willing to go — at least right now.
After using the Find N5 extensively last year, I wasn’t really sure what a new model would have to offer, but there are plenty of upgrades this year. The creaseless design alone makes the Find N6 a considerable upgrade, and when you add in the cameras, bigger battery, better design, and the new software features, you get what is possibly the best foldable of 2026.









































