Key Takeaways

  • Huawei launches Mate 70 series with HarmonyOS Next, aiming for 100,000 native apps in 2025.
  • Mate 70 models feature Kirin 9100 chipset, priced lower than iPhone 16 in China.
  • Huawei’s move to HarmonyOS could bring more competition to smartphone software, challenging Android and iOS dominance.



Huawei HarmonyOS Next, the company’s Google-free alternative to Android, entered public beta on a number of Huawei phones and tablets last month. Now, the first devices to hit store shelves with that software have launched. As reported by Reuters, Huawei took the wraps off the Mate 70 series at an event in China today, and said that the new OS would be coming to some of its older devices over the next few months.

Huawei initially revealed HarmonyOS in 2019 amid escalating trade tensions between the US and China. That iteration of HarmonyOS was built on AOSP and could run ported Android apps. The new HarmonyOS Next, meanwhile, is built only to run native HarmonyOS apps, and doesn’t include any code from AOSP. The Mate 70 series will apparently let users choose between the legacy HarmonyOS and the new HarmonyOS Next. The Next version currently supports about 15,000 apps; Huawei says it’s targeting 100,000 native HarmonyOS apps in 2025.



A hand holding the Huawei Mate 70 in front of a white background

Source: Huawei

The Mate 70.

According to Reuters, “at least some” Mate 70 models will ship with Huawei’s high-end in-house Kirin 9100 chipset. Reuters reports that the Mate 70 series will start at 5,499 yuan (about $758), undercutting the iPhone 16’s Chinese-market starting price of 5,999 yuan. The Mate 70 Pro will start at 6,499 yuan; the Mate 70 Pro+ will start at 8,499 yuan.


Smartphone software could use more competition

Huawei’s move away from Android stems from trade policy that restricts American companies from doing business with the Chinese firm, but it could end up benefitting mobile tech on the whole. Under most circumstances, it’s hard for alternatives to the established players (Android and iOS) to gain a foothold. But the unique situation Huawei finds itself in could give HarmonyOS Next a real boost: Reutrers reports that Counterpoint expects Mate 70 phone shipments to top 10 million.


Huawei hasn’t announced international plans for the Mate 70 series, and it certainly won’t see a US retail release. But assuming HarmonyOS Next devices make their way to markets outside China eventually, Google will be forced to compete directly with Huawei’s OS — and more competition is never a bad thing.