
OPPO has confirmed it will launch the Find X9 Ultra and Find X9s Pro in China on April 21st at 7 pm local time, with a joint imaging event alongside Hasselblad. The early teasers already give away how the two are being positioned. The Ultra has a more layered camera system with multiple zoom levels to play with, while the X9s Pro takes that same idea and fits it into a smaller phone.
The OPPO Find X9 Ultra is expected to run a quad-camera setup that covers different focal lengths instead of relying on one hero sensor. Leaks point to a 200MP primary camera, a 200MP periscope telephoto, a 50MP telephoto with 10x optical zoom, and a 50MP ultrawide lens. The 10x zoom uses a redesigned prism system and stretches to 120x digitally, but the more interesting bit is how OPPO is trying to keep the experience consistent across lenses. OPPO is also said to be calibrating each unit during manufacturing so that the camera alignment stays consistent across devices.
Outside the camera, the Ultra reads like a full flagship without caveats. A 6.82-inch 2K LTPO OLED display, Snapdragon 8 Elite Gen 5 chipset, and a battery above 7,000mAh put it in the same league as other top-end devices. The OPPO Find X9s Pro heads in a different direction but keeps the same intent. OPPO has confirmed dual 200MP cameras for the primary and telephoto sensors, which is still not something you see often in a compact phone. Most smaller flagships compromise here, usually on zoom, but this one seems to hold its ground.
The rest of the X9s Pro follows through on that idea. A 6.32-inch OLED display keeps it easy to handle, while the Dimensity 9500 chipset and a battery close to 7,000mAh suggest it’s not giving up endurance to stay compact. That balance is where it stands out, especially when most smaller phones from Samsung and Apple tend to play it safer with battery size.
The Find X9 Ultra has already appeared on BIS certification, which points to a possible India launch. For buyers, the split between the two is easy to read. The Ultra is built for those who want range and flexibility from their cameras in a full-sized flagship. The X9s Pro is for those who want something smaller but still expect the camera and battery to hold up. What makes either of them work will come down to pricing once OPPO takes them beyond China. Given these specs, those with older flagships might find a compelling upgrade, while recent buyers might want to wait for full reviews