For years, the "Ultra" designation in the smartphone market has served as a shorthand for engineering excess, a category defined by the pursuit of photographic and computational limits. With the arrival of the Find X9 Ultra in Spain and the broader European market, Oppo is finally bringing its most ambitious hardware to a region previously dominated by a few established incumbents. The device does not attempt to hide its purpose; its massive circular camera module acts as a visual anchor, signaling a pivot from a mobile device that happens to have a camera to a specialized optical instrument that happens to be a phone.
Under the hood, the Find X9 Ultra is built on the Snapdragon 8 Elite Gen 5 platform, but its most significant internal advancement may be its power system. The device utilizes a 7,500 mAh silicon-carbon battery, a technology that allows for significantly higher energy density than traditional lithium-ion cells. This enables the phone to maintain a relatively ergonomic profile—available in "Tundra Umber" and "Canyon Orange" finishes—despite carrying a battery capacity that would have recently required a much more cumbersome chassis.
The photographic array remains the centerpiece. Featuring a 200-megapixel main sensor and a 200-megapixel 3x telephoto lens, Oppo is betting on raw resolution and light-gathering capability to differentiate itself in the premium segment. By pairing this hardware with a 144Hz AMOLED display and 100W fast charging, the Find X9 Ultra represents a calculated effort to redefine the high-end experience through sheer technical force. It is a statement of intent, suggesting that the future of the flagship lies in merging professional-grade optics with next-generation material science.
With reporting from Xataka.
Source · Xataka



