Oppo Pad 6 unveiled with Dimensity 9500s, 12‑inch 144 Hz LCD and 10 420 mAh battery
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Oppo Pad 6 unveiled with Dimensity 9500s, 12‑inch 144 Hz LCD and 10 420 mAh battery

Smartphones Reporter
4 min read

Oppo’s latest tablet adds a high‑refresh 12.1‑inch display, a flagship MediaTek Dimensity 9500s processor, and a 10 420 mAh battery with 67 W fast charging, running Android 16 with ColorOS 16.

Announcement

Oppo has officially launched the Pad 6 tablet in China, joining the Reno 16 and Reno 16 Pro smartphones announced the same day. The device is now available for pre‑order on Oppo’s online store, with the entry model priced at CNY 4,099 (about $603).

Featured image

Key specifications

Feature Detail
Display 12.1‑inch LCD, 3000×2120 px, 7:5 aspect, 144 Hz refresh, 900 nits peak brightness
Processor MediaTek Dimensity 9500s (8‑core, 3.2 GHz max)
RAM / Storage 8 GB + 256 GB, 12 GB + 256 GB, 16 GB + 512 GB
Cameras 8 MP rear, 8 MP front
Battery 10 420 mAh, 67 W wired fast charge
Audio Six stereo speakers, dual microphones
OS Android 16 with ColorOS 16 skin
Dimensions / Weight 266.9 × 193.3 × 5.99 mm, 577 g (Space Gray) / 579 g (Galaxy Silver)
Connectivity Wi‑Fi 6E, Bluetooth 5.3, USB‑C 3.2, optional 5G (Dimensity 9500s)

Display and refresh rate

The 12.1‑inch panel pushes a 3000×2120 resolution, giving a pixel density of about 274 ppi. A 144 Hz refresh rate makes scrolling and gaming feel fluid, while the 900‑nit peak brightness ensures readability outdoors. Unlike many premium tablets that opt for OLED, Oppo sticks with an LCD panel, likely to keep costs down while still delivering accurate colors.

Performance core

The Dimensity 9500s is MediaTek’s first 4‑nm flagship SoC aimed at high‑end tablets and 5G laptops. It combines four Cortex‑X3 cores for peak performance with four Cortex‑A78 cores for efficiency. Benchmarks released by MediaTek show single‑core scores around 1,300 points in Geekbench 5, which should comfortably handle productivity suites, Android games, and multitasking.

Battery and charging

A 10 420 mAh cell translates to roughly 12‑14 hours of mixed‑use video playback, according to Oppo’s internal testing. The 67 W charger can refill the battery from 0 % to 80 % in just 45 minutes, a speed comparable to many ultrabooks.

Software experience

Running Android 16 under ColorOS 16, the Pad 6 inherits the latest privacy controls, adaptive UI scaling for large screens, and a suite of productivity features such as split‑screen multitasking and a built‑in note‑taking app that works with the optional S‑Pen (sold separately). The UI also offers a “Desktop Mode” that mimics a PC‑like environment when the tablet is connected to an external monitor via USB‑C.

Ecosystem context

Oppo’s tablet strategy has always leaned on the synergy between its smartphones and the ColorOS ecosystem. By launching the Pad 6 alongside the Reno 16 series, the company encourages users to adopt a unified device family: contacts, messages, and app data sync seamlessly via Oppo’s cloud services. However, the Pad 6 does not include a fingerprint sensor, a feature that some competitors (e.g., Samsung’s Galaxy Tab S9) still provide for quick unlock.

The inclusion of a high‑refresh LCD and a flagship MediaTek chip positions the Pad 6 as a direct alternative to the iPad Air 6 and the Samsung Galaxy Tab S9 FE. Its price point, especially after the pre‑sale discount, undercuts the iPad Air by roughly $150 while offering a larger battery and a more open Android environment. For users already invested in the Oppo smartphone lineup, the tablet’s ColorOS continuity features—such as shared app shortcuts and cross‑device clipboard—make it a compelling addition.

Competition and lock‑in considerations

While Android tablets have historically struggled to match the app optimization seen on iPadOS, recent improvements in Google Play’s tablet UI and the rise of cross‑platform apps (e.g., Microsoft Office, Adobe Creative Cloud) narrow the gap. Oppo’s decision to ship Android 16 ensures at least two years of OS updates, but the long‑term support track record for Oppo tablets remains less certain than that of Apple or Samsung.

Potential buyers should weigh the benefits of a large, high‑refresh display and fast charging against the lack of a built‑in fingerprint sensor and the relatively smaller app ecosystem for tablets. Those who prioritize a cohesive Oppo ecosystem and value a lower price point will find the Pad 6 attractive, while power users who need the most mature tablet‑first apps may still gravitate toward iPad or Samsung alternatives.


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