A smartphone that moves, tracks and responds in real time—but is it real utility or just a marketing gimmick?
Updated
April 15, 2026 6:00 PM

HONOR Robot Phone, with its camera arm extended. PHOTO: HONOR
Smartphones today feel more familiar than new. Each year brings better performance and better cameras, but fewer real surprises. So when a company unveils something called a “Robot Phone”, it’s bound to get attention.
HONOR did exactly that at the Mobile World Congress (MWC) in Barcelona this year. While most smartphone brands are focused on software upgrades, HONOR is trying something different with hardware. Its Robot Phone is built to move and adjust on its own. The camera sits on a motorized system that can tilt, track motion and shift angles automatically. It almost looks like a small robotic head, following whatever is happening in front of it. It can pick up sound, recognize motion and stay visually aware of its surroundings. This result feels less like using a regular phone and more like interacting with something responsive.
So what makes HONOR’s Robot Phone different from the smartphones we already use? Here’s a closer look at its camera system, AI features and design, and whether it is truly something new or simply smart marketing.
At its core, the Robot Phone still works like a regular smartphone. What makes it different is the camera system. It has a 200MP camera that sits on a motorized arm with a three-axis gimbal, which extends when in use and folds back into the phone when not needed. The compact motor gives the camera physical movement, while motion control allows it to sense, track and follow a person or object in real time. That means it can keep a subject in frame without constant manual adjustment.
The camera also adds a more playful side to the experience. It can respond with simple gestures, such as nodding or shaking its head, and it can even move in sync with music.
This setup could be particularly useful for content creators. As CNET tech journalist and YouTuber Andrew Lanxon pointed out, it removes the need to carry a separate gimbal. Since the robotic camera module can easily fold into the body of the phone, it is easier to carry around and more convenient for filming or taking photos on the go.
The Robot Phone also has the practical advantage of a smartphone display. It gives users a bigger screen than a standalone camera for framing, monitoring and reviewing footage. Since it runs on Android, the process of recording, editing and sharing content is also more direct.
The most impressive part of the HONOR Robot Phone design is how it fits a moving camera system into the body of a smartphone without needing external attachments.
To make this possible, HONOR uses a custom micro motor that is 70% smaller than mainstream competitors. The company also says it is the industry’s smallest four-degrees-of-freedom (4DoF) gimbal system. To support the stable movement of the camera module, the internal structure uses high-strength materials such as steel and titanium alloy. These materials help the mechanism stay durable as it shifts and repositions over time.
Battery life is another obvious question. HONOR has not revealed the battery capacity of the Robot Phone itself, but it did showcase its Silicon-Carbon Blade Battery technology at MWC 2026. The company says this battery is designed to increase energy density while keeping devices slim, and that it could support capacities of 7,000 mAh and beyond in future foldable devices.
That is not specific to the Robot Phone, but it does hint at the kind of battery improvements that may be needed for smartphones with moving parts and more advanced camera systems.
The AI features in Honor’s Robot Phone are focused on how the device sees and responds to its surroundings in real time. At the most basic level, the phone can track what is happening in a scene and adjust itself without constant user input.
On the functional side, the system keeps subjects framed and in focus automatically. Its AI Object Tracking ensures subjects stay centred, while AI SpinShot enables controlled 90° and 180° rotations for smoother transitions, even when the phone is used one-handed. It can also detect motion and recognize sound, which lets it respond to activity as it happens instead of reacting frame by frame.
The AI becomes more noticeable in the way the device behaves. When activated, the camera module unfolds and the screen displays a pair of animated eyes that track the user’s face and gaze. Honor calls this “embodied AI”, meaning the assistant expresses itself through movement rather than only voice or text. The camera module can adjust its angle during video calls, which makes it feel a little more physically present.
According to Thomas Bai, AI product expert at Honor, the goal is to move beyond passive assistance. By combining sensing, movement and real-time processing, the device is designed to interact with its environment in a more continuous way. In practice, that could mean interpreting its surroundings and responding as situations change, such as when someone is moving through an unfamiliar space.
The Robot Phone has sparked curiosity, but there is still a lot we do not know. For one thing, it is still a prototype, with a release expected later this year. Early signs also suggest it may be expensive, partly because of rising memory chip costs. Some of its more playful features also feel uncertain. In demos, the phone can move along to music, but with only a handful of pre-set tracks, it is hard to tell whether that feature will be genuinely useful or remain more of a showcase moment.
Then there are the practical questions. A motorized camera system could make the phone heavier and more top-heavy, which may affect comfort during daily use. Running a motor alongside continuous AI tracking will also likely put pressure on battery life. These are not dealbreakers, but they are trade-offs that will matter outside of a demo.
Privacy is another concern that is hard to overlook. Some of the AI features rely on cloud processing, which means certain data is sent to external servers instead of being processed fully on the device. That is common in many AI systems today, but it feels more significant here because the phone is built to actively track movement and reposition its camera in real time. For some people, that level of autonomy may feel intrusive rather than helpful. It also raises bigger questions about what sensors are built into the device and how much data they collect during everyday use.
So, is the HONOR Robot Phone a real step forward, or just a clever idea packaged well?
The answer depends on who it is for.
For content creators, the appeal is obvious. Early indications suggest it could make video capture easier by reducing the need for extra gear. Honor’s collaboration with cinema camera company ARRI also suggests a serious push toward more cinematic smartphone footage.
For everyone else, the value is less clear. Outside of content creation, it is still hard to see how these features would translate into everyday use in a meaningful way.
For now, the Robot Phone sits somewhere between promise and experiment. Whether it turns into a genuinely useful new kind of smartphone or fades away as a novelty will only become clear once it moves beyond controlled demos and into real life.
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Inside Mercuryo’s Visa Partnership
Updated
February 10, 2026 11:18 PM

Close up of Visa credit cards. PHOTO: ADOBE STOCK
Mercuryo is a fintech startup that builds the infrastructure to enable money to move seamlessly between crypto and traditional banking systems. In simple terms, it works on the problem of turning digital assets into usable cash.
As more people hold crypto through wallets and exchanges, one practical issue keeps arising: how do you actually withdraw that money and use it in the real world? For many users, converting tokens into local currency is still slow, confusing or expensive. That gap between “owning” crypto and being able to spend it is where Mercuryo operates.
The company’s latest step forward is a partnership with Visa to improve what is known as “off-ramping” — the process of converting crypto into fiat currency like dollars or euros. Until now, this has often been slow, expensive and confusing for users. Mercuryo is using Visa Direct, Visa’s real-time payments system, to make that process faster and more direct.
With this integration, users can convert their digital tokens into local currency and send the money straight to a Visa debit or credit card. The transaction happens through systems that already power global card payments, which means the money can arrive in near real time instead of days later.
Technically, this connects two very different worlds. On one side is blockchain-based crypto, which moves value on decentralised networks. On the other side is the traditional payment system, which runs on banks, cards and regulated rails. Mercuryo’s platform sits between the two and handles the conversion and movement of funds.
Instead of users leaving their wallet or exchange to cash out, Mercuryo allows the conversion to happen inside the apps and platforms they already use. The user does not need to understand the plumbing behind it. They just see that crypto becomes spendable money on their card.
This matters because access is what makes any financial system usable. If people cannot easily move their money, they treat it as locked or risky. Faster off-ramps make digital assets more practical, not just speculative.
Mercuryo’s work is not about creating new tokens or trading tools. It is about building the pipes that let money move smoothly between Web3 and the traditional financial world. The Visa partnership strengthens those pipes by using a global, trusted payments network that already works at scale.
Visa also framed the partnership as a bridge between systems. Anastasia Serikova, Head of Visa Direct, Europe, said: "By leveraging Visa Direct's capabilities, Mercuryo is not only making converting to fiat faster, simpler and more accessible than ever—it's building bridges between the crypto space and the traditional financial system. This integration empowers users to seamlessly convert digital assets into fiat in near real time, creating a more connected and convenient payment experience".
Over time, this kind of infrastructure is what determines whether crypto remains niche or becomes part of everyday finance. Not through headlines, but through systems that quietly reduce friction.
Mercuryo’s direction is clear: make digital assets easier to use, easier to exit and easier to connect to the money systems people already rely on.