• 2 min read
8849 Tank 5 packs a projector, 17,600 mAh battery and 3 cameras
8849's new Tank 5 is what happens when a rugged smartphone stops pretending to be modest. It combines a built-in DLP projector, a 17,600 mAh battery, three 50-megapixel rear cameras, and a laser rangefinder in a device t

8849's new Tank 5 is what happens when a rugged smartphone stops pretending to be modest. It combines a built-in DLP projector, a 17,600 mAh battery, three 50-megapixel rear cameras, and a laser rangefinder in a device that weighs 715 grams and costs $900. If your idea of a smartphone is something you can toss into a pocket, this is not that phone. If your idea is a portable toolbox with Android 16, it suddenly makes a lot more sense.
The Tank 5's headline feature is the projector: 2048×1080 resolution, autofocus, automatic trapezoid correction, and up to 220 lumens of brightness. That is bright enough to be more than a gimmick, though still firmly in personal cinema-in-a-dim-room territory. The laser rangefinder is more niche, but it can measure distances to objects at up to 4 meters, which is exactly the sort of feature that sounds absurd until the first person on a job site asks to borrow it.
Tank 5 specs are aimed at power users
Under the armor, 8849 went with MediaTek’s Dimensity 9400e, paired with Android 16 and five years of security updates. The display is a 6.73-inch AMOLED panel with a 3200 × 1440 resolution, 120 Hz refresh rate, and a claimed 3000 nits of peak brightness. In other words, the screen is far more conventional than the rest of the hardware, which is probably a smart move for a phone trying to be everything at once.
- Rear cameras: three 50-megapixel modules
- Front camera: 32 megapixels
- Battery: 17,600 mAh
- Charging: 120 W wired, 25 W reverse wired
- Protection: IP68/IP69K
A rugged phone that leans into excess
The Tank 5 also gets a 1200-lumen camping light, a 3.5 mm headphone jack, a side fingerprint reader, two programmable buttons, and support for Wi-Fi 7, Bluetooth 5.4, NFC, and eSIM. That is a long list, but it fits the pitch: this is not a mainstream flagship trying to shave grams and millimeters. It is a brute-force device for people who would rather carry one very heavy phone than a phone plus half a backpack’s worth of accessories.

Recommended reading
Galaxy Z Fold 8 Ultra may get a bigger battery
Sold in a single 18/512 GB configuration, the Tank 5 is already on sale. The real question is whether 8849 has built a serious niche machine for contractors, campers, and gadget obsessives, or simply the most overbuilt phone of the year. My money is on a little of both.
Gadgets Editor
Eli is obsessed with the tangible future. He reviews phones, wearables, and everything with a battery. Known for his rigorous testing protocols and unabashed teardowns, Eli has broken more review units than he cares to admit, all in the name of discovering the truth about durability and repairability.


