While the full changelog remains limited, the tablet layout is the headline change because it directly leverages the device’s distinctive wide display.
The Pura X Max was designed around a horizontal, wide foldable display rather than the typical tall smartphone shape. Huawei describes the layout as “paper‑like,” intended to make reading and viewing content feel more natural.
Tablet mode builds on that concept in several ways:
Because the phone uses a consistent wide aspect ratio for both inner and outer screens, switching between folded and unfolded states is designed to feel more seamless.
The Pura X Max launched in China on April 20, 2026, positioning itself as Huawei’s first wide book‑style foldable smartphone.
Major hardware features include:
Display
Processor and software
Memory and storage
Battery and charging
Camera system
The foldable also supports features such as high refresh rate displays and a premium construction with an aluminum frame and distinctive camera module design.
Huawei engineered the device around a wide foldable form factor, which changes how the hinge and body are used compared with traditional foldables. The phone includes a hinge design referred to as a Basalt Waterdrop hinge, intended to improve drop resistance and increase internal space within the fold.
The device also features:
These elements reflect Huawei’s push to position the device as a premium foldable with durability improvements over earlier designs.
TechInsights has published an unboxing and initial hardware look at the Pura X Max. From the available information, analysts confirmed several core components inside the device, including:
However, detailed teardown information—such as the display stack layers, hinge mechanism internals, or chip packaging—has not yet been fully published. As a result, precise component‑level findings remain limited in public reports so far.
The Pura X Max launched first in China and went on sale April 25, 2026 through Huawei’s official channels.
So far, Huawei has focused the launch on the Chinese market, and wider global availability has not been clearly confirmed.
Most book‑style foldables emphasize narrow phone‑like proportions when folded. Huawei instead designed the Pura X Max around a wider, laptop‑style aspect ratio closer to what you see on tablets or notebooks.
The idea is simple:
With the new tablet mode update, Huawei is pushing that concept further—turning the unfolded device into something closer to a mini tablet that folds into a pocketable phone.
Whether the wide‑foldable approach becomes a broader industry trend remains to be seen, but the Pura X Max is one of the clearest attempts so far to rethink how foldable smartphones should work.
Comments
0 comments