So if you want a phone that comes with a 2nm Snapdragon 8 Elite Gen 6 chipset and a 10,000 mAh battery – and, most importantly, one that doesn’t break the bank – you’ll have to walk the walk.
Enter the Honor WIN 2 series


Big battery, big fun. | Image by Honor
We’re going to discuss some China-exclusive devices, which, however, draw lots of attention with their top-tier specs. More and more, people want great battery life out of their handsets and while iPhones and Galaxies are OK in that regard, they’re no match for rivals with five-figure mAh capacity cells.
At a point in the future (but probably not in the summer), Honor might launch their WIN 2 series. There’s no exact date, but since reports talk of the 2nm Snapdragon 8 Elite Gen 6 series chipset, it’s reasonable to assume that the phones can’t possibly materialize before Qualcomm unveils its next big thing.
Not much is known about the Honor WIN 2 except for a possible battery cell that’s 10,000 mAh+ and an internal cooling fan.
The original WIN series
We first heard about the Honor WIN and Honor WIN RT back at the very end of 2025. The devices feature a 6.83-inch 1.5K LTPS OLED screen with a 185Hz refresh rate, which surpasses even the 165Hz panel used on the OnePlus 15. Both phones also came with a huge 10,000mAh silicon-carbon battery with 100W wired charging support, which is nothing short of spectacular.
The two models share a similar design with an 8.3mm body, metal frame, and glass-fiber back but differ internally. The standard Honor WIN uses Qualcomm’s Snapdragon 8 Elite Gen 5 processor, while the WIN RT relies on the previous-generation Snapdragon 8 Elite chip. Both devices support LPDDR5X RAM and UFS 4.1 storage for improved gaming and multitasking performance.
Meanwhile, the Galaxy S26 Ultra – a $1,300 beast, mind you, offers UFS 4.0…
What about the WIN 2 price?
This is where things get tricky. Last year, the OG Honor WIN series started at roughly $385 for the WIN RT and around $570 for the standard WIN with the better chipset.
Since the Snapdragon 8 Elite Gen 6 is expected to be costlier than the current-gen Qualcomm chips, this would surely drive the price up. Not only that, but RAM chips are not expected to get cheaper soon, so let’s bump last year’s $570 price tag by some $100 or so. I hope Honor can manage to keep things under $700.

