At the end of an epic, two-hour-plus presentation for the Magic8 Pro smartphone, Honor showed what it believes is the future of smartphones, AI, and robotics.
It’s called the Robot Phone, and it’s one of the most bizarre things we’ve seen this year.
Wall-E in a phone?
Here’s how Honor describes the Robot Phone:
This innovative device will integrate AI-powered multi-modal intelligence, robotic functionality, and advanced handheld imaging capabilities. As a new species of AI device, the Honor Robot Phone will redefine future human-machine interaction and coexistence, positioning Honor at the forefront of AI device innovation.
Yes, you read that right. The Robot Phone isn’t a new model or a new range, but a new species. Like Honor has abandoned its manufacturing plant in China and moved to Jurassic Park.
The promotional video is suitably out-there too, and it paints a picture of a future where Honor blends Wall-E with BB-8, then puts the result inside a phone that looks a bit like the iPhone 17 Pro Max, where the “robot” views the world through a gimbal-mounted camera that pops out the back of the phone.
Not a robot overlord
Honor continues to say:
With the Robot Phone, Honor envisions the future phone as more than just a tool. It becomes an emotional companion that senses, adapts, and evolves autonomously like a robot, enriching its users’ lives with love, joy, and wisdom.
To call the Robot Phone a robot is a bit of a stretch, but it does promise to give AI more of a personality, something that’s clear from all the wheee, ohhhh, bleep, and coooo sound effects that accompany the video. It’s like R2-D2 swallowed Grogu.
Honor shows the Robot Phone entertaining kids (nothing new there), watching you walk around the house, checking out women who’ve just wandered off the set of The Matrix, critiquing outfits, providing selfie duties, and skydiving. Beats folding clothes, I suppose.
It sees the world through an evolution of those old pop-up cameras we’ve seen on phones like the Asus Zenfone 6 and Honor 9X, but this time, rather than being in a fixed position, a motorized gimbal gives it a far wider view, including where the phone is face down on a table and the all-seeing eye can still survey its domain.
But what’s it for?
We’ve marveled at the ingenuity, squealed at the cuteness, and clapped with glee as the camera emerges from the back of the phone to greet us. Then reality hits. Why would we want such a thing, and what will it actually do?
Looked at (somewhat) sensibly, the Robot Phone is an evolution of the visual search features we’ve seen in the Ray-Ban Meta, along with the few helpful AI features that have been released, like Google’s Circle to Search. It sees what you see, and will almost certainly have a web search at its robotic fingertips to keep you informed.
It’s also an interesting way to make us less self-conscious talking to AI. Voice is the most intuitive way to interact with the software, but it’s also the weirdest, and not everyone wants to talk to an inanimate object. By building a phone with a personality right out of the box, the Robot Phone may encourage us to feel more comfortable talking to and using AI.
It’s also impossible to ignore the massive, growing popularity of AI chatbots. This does point to people being willing to entertain an AI friend, so why not create one with a few helpful hardware-based features? If people are falling in love with ChatGPT, what’s to stop future Honor phone owners wanting to give the Robot Phone a name, and ask for its hand in marriage?
Is it real?
Whatever you think of the Robot Phone, you’ve got to give Honor credit for thinking differently about the future of smartphones and AI.
However, we probably shouldn’t think too deeply about how the hardware will eventually work, what the battery life will be like, how the gimbal will affect durability, or the many privacy concerns that come with having the Eye of Sauron on the back of our phones.
Does this mean it’s a concept and nothing more? It appears Honor sees it as more than just a concept, and it intends to tell us more about the Robot Phone at Mobile World Congress 2026, which takes place in Barcelona, Spain in March.
Will the trade show be where we see a real Robot Phone for the first time? It’s exactly the type of thing we like to see there, and manufacturers always do plenty to ensure they stand out in the crowd. If it’s there, winking and cooing at crowds, 2026 may just become the year of the Robot Phone. If you’re keen, you can sign up for information about the phone here.