Honor Win Turbo could be one of the biggest battery phones of the year

Honor has confirmed that the Win Turbo will launch in China on May 29 with a massive 10,000mAh battery, turning battery life into the phone’s main selling point. The company says the device can deliver more than 14 hours of continuous gaming or up to 22 hours of short-video playback, while also supporting 80W wired charging and 27W reverse charging.
Honor is preparing to expand its Win lineup with the launch of the Win Turbo in China on May 29, and the company is clearly leaning on battery endurance as the device’s headline feature. Ahead of release, Honor has confirmed that the phone will ship with a 10,000mAh battery, a capacity that immediately places it among the most battery-heavy mainstream smartphones expected this year.
According to Honor, that battery is not just large on paper but also designed for sustained use. The company claims the Win Turbo can last for more than 14 hours of continuous gaming or around 22 hours of short-form video streaming, suggesting that this is being positioned as a device for users who prioritize stamina over compactness.
Charging support also looks unusually strong for a phone with such a large battery. Honor says the Win Turbo will support 80W wired fast charging and 27W reverse charging, allowing it to act as a power source for other small devices when needed. That combination makes the phone more practical than a simple “big battery” novelty, especially for users who spend long periods away from a charger.
The company has also started teasing improvements to the phone’s connectivity. In a separate Weibo post, Honor said the Win Turbo will include a new communication chip and a six-wing antenna design, both intended to improve signal performance and overall connection stability. While those details are less eye-catching than the battery figure, they suggest Honor is trying to present the phone as a more complete endurance-focused package rather than just a device with oversized power reserves.
So far, Honor has officially shown only the design and color options, while confirming a triple rear camera setup led by a 50MP primary sensor. Other rumored specifications include a metal frame, a 1.5K LTPS display, and hardware similar to the Honor Power2, though those details have not yet been formally confirmed by the company.
If the reported specs hold up, the Win Turbo could become one of the more unusual launches in Honor’s portfolio: a phone built around extreme battery capacity, rapid charging, and connectivity tweaks, rather than the usual focus on thinner bodies or premium camera hardware.
