A Foldable That Fits Saudi Football’s Busiest Months

The HONOR Magic V6 has been living in the kit bags of Saudi international players for a few months now. It has not asked for special treatment. That alone makes it unusual for a foldable.
SHANGHAI, Gulf Tech News
Saudi football is heading into another packed summer. The league rarely leaves the headlines, the national team is preparing for the biggest stage on the calendar, and players like Saud Abdulhamid, Ayman Yahya and Firas Al Buraikan are moving between training pitches, airport lounges and team hotels with very little empty space in between. The public sees 90 minutes. The players live the travel days, recovery sessions and tactical briefings that surround them.
In that routine, the phone in a player’s hand has stopped being a side accessory. It is how they receive tactical clips from coaching staff, confirm call-times, speak to family between camps, and share a controlled slice of their day with fans. Over the past few months, a number of Saudi internationals, including Abdulhamid, Yahya and Al Buraikan, have been using the HONOR Magic V6. That does not automatically make it a sports story. But it does highlight something about where foldables are as a category: a phone that can survive a professional footballer’s schedule without complaint is a phone that has moved past the showroom stage.
The short version: Magic V6 is one of the first foldables that feels ready for bus floors, tunnel crowds and long travel blocks rather than a controlled demo environment. It is not going to convert every slab-phone loyalist, and while some other brands might still own the mindshare in this category. But on battery, durability and screen utility, HONOR has built something that earns its place in a pocket that cannot afford a dead phone by 4 pm.
Two screens, two modes of a football day
For some people, a foldable is still a curiosity. For players, the split between outer and inner screen maps neatly onto the structure of their day. The outer display is the walking-between-meetings phone. The inner display is the I-finally-have-ten-minutes-in-a-quiet-room screen.
Magic V6’s 6.52-inch outer panel behaves like any high-end bar phone: AMOLED, 1–120 Hz adaptive refresh, and enough peak brightness to stay legible under Riyadh or Jeddah sun when you step off the team bus. Fold it open and the 7.95-inch inner AMOLED turns the device into a compact tablet for video analysis, long group chats, or streaming a series in the hotel. Both panels run more than 400 pixels per inch, which matters when you are zooming into player movement on a training clip or reading a dense scouting document on a screen you are holding a foot from your face.
In landscape, the big inner display lets a player watch full-screen footage with notes or a group chat running alongside it. On recovery days, it doubles as an entertainment screen large enough that the laptop or tablet stays in the bag but small enough to slip back into a tracksuit pocket when the physio calls your name. The other foldables offer a similar inner-screen experience, but Magic V6’s battery advantage means it does not run out of stamina before the player does.
Durability for buses, tunnels and mixed zones
The sticking point for many people considering a foldable is still the hinge. During a domestic season, never mind a summer of friendlies and international tournaments, a player’s phone is opened and closed hundreds of times a day and lives in kit bags and benches, not on a soft office desk. Magic V6 addresses that directly with its Super Steel Hinge, rated at 2,800 MPa tensile strength and built around a reinforced spine rather than fragile moving parts. The numbers matter less than the effect: you stop thinking about whether it is one fold closer to failure and go back to treating it like a normal phone that happens to open wider.
Ingress protection is where HONOR pushes furthest. Magic V6 carries IP68 and IP69 ratings, putting it on par with, and in one respect ahead of, many traditional slab flagships. That matters on training pitches where sprinklers, wet grass and loose pellets get everywhere, and in mixed zones where drinks are knocked over as often as questions are asked. A foldable that can handle water spray and dust is a different proposition from the delicate early-generation devices many people still picture when they hear the word.
Then there is the battery. HONOR has fitted a 6,660 mAh silicon-carbon battery into the chassis, significantly larger than any other mainstream foldable currently ships. Combined with 80W wired and 66W wireless fast charging plus reverse wireless for topping up earbuds or a teammate’s watch, it is a phone built around the assumption that you will not always have access to a wall socket at 2 pm. The practical difference: leaving the team bus with 50% instead of scrambling for a charger at 20%.
What this signal for Saudi fans

None of this will decide whether Saud Abdulhamid wins a tackle or Ayman Yahya beats a defender in the dying minutes. Their careers will be shaped on the pitch, not by the hinge in their pocket. But the technology they lean on between matches says something quiet about where the foldable category has arrived. A few years ago, it would have been hard to picture a foldable living comfortably in the chaos of a national-team camp. Today, Magic V6 is doing exactly that: surviving buses, tunnels, recovery rooms and airport runs without requiring any special treatment.
For Saudi fans watching the build-up to a big summer for their national side, there is a small point of connection in that shift. The same type of device they might use to stream warm-up games, track news or follow training-camp content is also being used by some of the players themselves to review clips, stay in touch with family and find a few minutes of quiet in short pockets of downtime. Magic V6 does not change the sport. It just shows that foldables have moved from fragile showpieces to everyday tools that can hold their own in the middle of Saudi football’s most demanding months.



