Skip to main content
  1. Home
  2. Phones
  3. Mobile
  4. News

Honor 70 and Honor Pad 8 promise high specs for modest money

Add as a preferred source on Google

Honor has announced two new mobile devices, the Honor 70 smartphone and the Honor Pad 8 tablet, both of which will be available at the beginning of September in the U.K. Since being sold by Huawei, Honor has released the Honor Magic4 Pro phone globally, and it really impressed in our review. Let’s take a look at these two new devices, which promise big features and performance for modest money.

Honor 70

This midrange Honor 70 is powered by a Qualcomm Snapdragon 778G processor and comes with 8GB of RAM, plus a choice of 128GB or 256GB of storage space. The screen is a 6.67-inch OLED with a 120Hz refresh rate, HDR10+ certification, and a Pulse Width Modulation (PWM) of 1920Hz, which Honor says makes the screen more comfortable to view due to less flickering. A 4,800mAh battery provides the power and is recharged using an included 66-watt charger.

Honor 70 seen from the back.
Andy Boxall/Digital Trends

Honor is talking up the camera on the back of the Honor 70. It has a “Dual Ring” design, something like the Huawei P50 Pro and the OnePlus Nord 2T, and it’s the first to use the Sony IMX800 54-megapixel camera. It’s joined by a 50MP wide-angle camera and a 2MP macro camera. Using Honor’s Image Engine, the phone has a video feature called Solo Cut. This uses AI to focus on a single person when shooting video, placing them in a small picture-in-picture window in the completed footage.

Recommended Videos

It doesn’t use facial recognition, but instead focuses on human movement to capture the subject, and is clever enough to refocus if a person leaves and reenters the frame. Both the main image and the Solo Cut window are recorded in 1080p and at 30 frames per second (fps). It’s an unusual feature and is likely only going to be useful in very specific situations. Other camera features include a Night Portrait mode with a bokeh effect and a 32MP selfie camera in the screen.

The Honor 70 doesn’t share a family resemblance with the Magic4 Pro. It has an attractive, but fairly standard design. The frosted glass rear panel looks excellent and is cool to the touch, but the dual camera modules protrude a lot from the otherwise sleek body, slightly ruining its looks. It suffers from the age-old problem of being quite uncomfortable to grip due to the heavily tapered sides.

MagicUI worked really well on the Magic4 Pro and seems to be very similar here. Helping that is the 120Hz screen, which scrolls very smoothly. We haven’t tested the camera yet, but will have more to say on it in our full review coming in the near future.

The Honor 70 comes in three different colors — Midnight Black, Crystal Silver, and Emerald Green — and will be released on September 2, with pre-orders going live on August 26. The basic 8GB/128GB model costs 480 British pounds ($570) and the 8GB/256GB version costs 530 pounds ($625).

Honor Pad 8

Honor has never released a tablet internationally before, so this is a first for the brand. But rather than go all-out with an iPad Pro-rivaling top-spec model, it has pitched the modest Pad 8 at a more sensible price. Just 270 pounds ($320) buys you the Pad 8. For that, you get a massive 12.1-inch screen with a 2K resolution, surrounded by a 7.2mm thick bezel for an 87% screen-to-body ratio. It’s made from aluminum, weighs 520 grams, and is very thin at 6.9mm.

The Honor Pad 8's screen.
Andy Boxall/Digital Trends

A Qualcomm Snapdragon 680 processor provides the power, and there’s a big 7,250mAh battery inside, along with eight speakers around the body providing stereo sound with support for DTS:X Ultra Hi-Res audio. Like the Honor 70, the Pad 8 uses Honor’s Magic UI 6.1 software built over Android 12, with the added benefit of multitasking for four apps.

The screen ratio is wide, which means the black bars above and below TV shows and movies aren’t as intrusive, as you can see from our example of a 21:9 aspect ratio trailer playing (below). Despite the relatively ordinary processor, the tablet seems to be responsive. The thinness of the chassis makes it comfortable to grip, but the wideness means it can feel quite lopsided due to the weight when you hold it with one hand.

It’s a shame the refresh rate isn’t higher than 60Hz, but the screen is otherwise bright and colorful. A full review will come soon, but first impressions are good. The software is quick and attractive, it has complete access to Google Play and all the streaming and reading apps you want, and it doesn’t cost a fortune either.

Android tablets have long been a distant second to an iPad, even the cheapest one. But recent changes to the software are helping make the experience better. If the Honor Pad 8 continues to perform well, then it may end up changing all that, at least for those who don’t want to spend much money.

Andy Boxall
Andy has written about mobile technology for almost a decade. From 2G to 5G and smartphone to smartwatch, Andy knows tech.
Apple finally lets you make Siri sound like you want
You can now tune Siri's pace and personality to match your own vibe. No more one-size-fits-all robot voice.
Siri AI voice change

During the WWDC 2026 event, Apple demonstrated that users will finally be able to customize how Siri sounds. While this feature has been available in the Settings app since the first iOS 27 developer beta, the sliders for adjusting Siri's voice were greyed out. With the third developer beta Apple released today, these sliders are finally operational. Here’s everything you need to know about Siri’s new voice customization features. 

How do the new Siri voice controls work?

Read more
Shared Albums in iOS 27 feels like a private social media universe of its own, and I love it
No algorithm. No strangers. No follower count. Just the people you actually want to share things with.
Electronics, Phone, Mobile Phone

It has been a year since I uninstalled Instagram from my phone and reclaimed about two hours of my time every day. I was tired of seeing what random people were up to on the weekend, how I was still filing articles on a Sunday, and quietly getting jealous of people I don’t even know.

What I’d rather have any day is a place to share and relive moments with people I genuinely care about, without an algorithm, strangers, or the dopamine trap. Oddly enough, iOS 27’s Photos App comes with an overhauled Shared Albums that is exactly that. Ever since I started using it, I haven’t looked back.

Read more
HMD just launched four dumb phones with a Nokia badge and an AI button
These new Nokia dumb phones bring AI help without the smartphone doomscrolling
HMD is releasing new Nokia branded dum phones

AI has been pushed on all your latest smartphones, laptops, browsers, and anything else manufacturers can cram it in. Now, HMD has decided that even your basic dumb phone shouldn't be left out either. The company is bringing back the Nokia branding for this one, and yes, you also get a keypad.

HMD has quietly unveiled four Nokia-branded 4G feature phones, namely the Nokia 210 4G, Nokia 200 4G, Nokia 215 4G 2nd Edition, and Nokia 235 4G 2nd Edition. All four have physical number pads and a dedicated button for activating a voice-based AI assistant. Press it, speak a command, and the phone can switch on its torch, set an alarm or reminder, open the camera, or call someone from your contacts. It can also answer basic questions, offer simple recipes, and help with common foreign-language phrases.

Read more