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This year has been full of notable releases for Honor, delivering fantastic options for the upper mid-range and premium segments. But the Honor Magic 7 Lite, which debuted at the very beginning of the year, but the ancient processor held it back in too many ways.

That’s where the Honor Magic 8 Lite comes in. It upgrades to the latest Qualcomm Snapdragon 6 Gen 4 tech, granting snappy performance to nearly everything on the phone. It retains the 108MP camera system from the Magic 7 Lite, which isn’t nearly as good as the numbers suggest, but Honor’s bevy of AI tricks, both in the camera software and the OS, help make up for what the hardware might lack.

TikTok while in a hot tub and never want to worry about dropping it in the water, things don’t get better than this. Being able to actually use the screen while it’s wet is something only flagships from Honor and OnePlus have been blessed with until now.

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The sides of the Honor Magic 8 Lite, including buttons and ports(Image credit: Nicholas Sutrich / Android Central)The sides of the Honor Magic 8 Lite, including buttons and ports(Image credit: Nicholas Sutrich / Android Central)The sides of the Honor Magic 8 Lite, including buttons and ports(Image credit: Nicholas Sutrich / Android Central)The sides of the Honor Magic 8 Lite, including buttons and ports(Image credit: Nicholas Sutrich / Android Central)

While the chasis is irritatingly flat all around the sides — a trend I detest because of how difficult it is to pick up from a table and generally uncomfortable to hold for long periods of time — the camera island has a great unique style that’s immediately identifiable. The stereo speaker system onboard is crisp, clean, and clear, with a maximum volume mode that’s nothing short of impressive.

Battery life is beyond incredible, owing to a combination of a power-efficient processor paired with a 7500mAh battery. You’ll easily get 2-3 days out of a charge no matter how you use the phone. Thankfully, unlike the Magic 7 Lite, the Magic 8 Lite has great everyday performance that matches the best competition in this price range.


(Image credit: Nicholas Sutrich / Android Central)

The display is also excellent, sporting a 120Hz OLED that’s perfectly viewable in sunlight with flagship brightness levels. This one uses DC-like dimming all the way down to about 20%, and then kicks in to 3840Hz PWM dimming below that. From most angles, it seems like this is a perfect display for flicker-sensitive people, but it’s got one big problem: dithering.

That’s because while Honor says this display is capable of 10-bit color, it’s actually an 8-bit display that uses temporal dithering to fake the additional 2-bit depth. That means anyone sensitive to flickering could find this display uncomfortable, which clearly clashes with Honor’s claim that this is a “risk-free” display. At the least, this is still a much better display for flicker-sensitive folks than something from Samsung or Google in this price range.

The home screen of the Honor Magic 8 Lite running Magic OS 9

(Image credit: Nicholas Sutrich / Android Central)

Honor is launching this one with Magic OS 9, which is based on Android 15. That doesn’t make much sense given the Magic 8 Pro launches with Magic OS 10 (based on Android 16) but, at the very least, European customers can expect to see the Magic OS 10 update land in April 2026.

Beyond that, expect five more years of OS and security updates if you live in Europe. It’s a fantastic pledge that’s only outdone by Samsung and Google by one year. I don’t much care about the difference between six or seven years of updates, though, because, by that point, a mid-range phone will likely be sluggish and nearly unusable.

Apple or Samsung and should prove to be very comfortable, even for flicker-sensitive users.

The Honor Magic 8 Lite uses temporal dithering at all times to create 10-bit color depth. The OLED panel is 8-bit by default, and a 2-bit software dithering algorithm is employed. There is no way to disable dithering on this phone. Dithering can cause discomfort for some users and make the display unusable for them.