OnePlus announced the Turbo 6X series launch for June 10 and the Pro variant's spec sheet has already done the rounds. Currently available for pre-order in China, the Turbo 6X Pro is the kind of mid-range phone that makes you stop and check the price twice, because the specifications listed do not feel like they belong in the segment this phone is targeting.

The headline number is the battery. 8000mAh is enormous by any standard. Most flagships in 2025 are still shipping with 5000 to 5500mAh cells and calling it generous. OnePlus pairing that capacity with 80W Super Flash Charge means you are getting a phone that lasts exceptionally long and does not punish you with slow top-ups when it does eventually run low. For heavy users, students, and anyone who travels without easy access to a charger, this combination alone makes the Turbo 6X Pro worth serious consideration.

The processor is Dimensity 7400 SUPER, a mid-range chip that handles daily tasks and casual gaming without complaint. It is not a flagship SoC and OnePlus is not pretending otherwise. The Turbo branding suggests performance tuning on top of the base chip, but expectations should stay realistic. This is a phone built for efficiency and endurance, not benchmark chasing.

The display is a 1.5K Samsung panel with full brightness DC dimming and an eye comfort certification. DC dimming at all brightness levels is something even some premium phones skip, and its presence here is a genuine quality-of-life feature for anyone who spends long hours looking at a screen. The eye strain reduction at low brightness settings is noticeable in daily use and OnePlus including it on a mid-range device is the right call.

Durability is where this phone genuinely surprises. IP66, IP68, and IP69K ratings together mean the Turbo 6X Pro can handle dust, sustained water immersion, and high-pressure water jets. IP69K specifically covers high-temperature pressure washing, a rating more commonly found on industrial equipment than consumer smartphones. On top of that, the device has passed seven military standard tests covering drops, vibration, temperature extremes, and humidity. For a phone at this price tier, that level of protection is almost absurd in the best possible way.

ColorOS 16 with a six-year software support promise rounds out the package. Six years of updates on a mid-range phone is a commitment that most Android manufacturers still avoid making. OnePlus making it a selling point here puts pressure on competitors who charge significantly more and offer less longevity.

Now the real question: will it come to India?

My honest opinion is yes, and probably sooner than people expect. OnePlus has always treated India as a primary market, not an afterthought. The Turbo series branding, the aggressive battery spec, the military-grade durability ratings, and the long software support window all fit exactly what Indian mid-range buyers respond to. The ₹20,000 to ₹30,000 segment in India is brutally competitive and the Turbo 6X Pro's spec sheet is built to win arguments in that bracket.

The only uncertainty is timing. Chinese launches often precede Indian ones by a few weeks to a couple of months depending on inventory and regional certification. Given that pre-orders are already live in China, an India announcement before the end of July feels realistic. OnePlus typically does not sit on products this market-ready for long when the target audience is clearly there.

If it lands in India at the right price, the 8000mAh battery and IP69K rating alone will move units. The rest of the package is a bonus.