• 2 min read
Nubia Neo 5 Max brings back the 7.5-inch phone
Nubia has revived the old “phablet” idea with the Neo 5 Max, a 7.5-inch smartphone unveiled at MWC Shanghai 2026. The Nubia Neo 5 Max is aimed at external markets, which means Europe could get an official launch alongsid

Image: ixbt.com
Nubia has revived the old “phablet” idea with the Neo 5 Max, a 7.5-inch smartphone unveiled at MWC Shanghai 2026. The Nubia Neo 5 Max is aimed at external markets, which means Europe could get an official launch alongside Asia, making this more than a one-off regional curiosity.
The Neo 5 Max is not trying to win spec-sheet bragging rights. Instead, it lands in the entry-to-midrange bracket with an IPS display at 1.5K resolution, MediaTek’s Dimensity 7100 chip, a 7000 mAh battery, and Android 16. That mix screams “big screen first, premium later,” which is exactly the sort of compromise that keeps unusually large phones alive.
Nubia Neo 5 Max specs and gaming controller
The oddest part is also the most practical: Nubia says the Neo 5 Max supports a proprietary removable gaming controller. Attached, the device can double as a portable game console, which is a neat reminder that giant phones still have one advantage over actual handhelds – they already have a cellular connection and a battery big enough to feed one.
- 7.5-inch IPS display
- 1.5K resolution
- MediaTek Dimensity 7100
- 7000 mAh battery
- Android 16
Why oversized phones are back on the table
Nubia is not alone in sniffing around the big-screen niche again. For years, mainstream phone makers have chased thinner bezels and lighter bodies, but gaming, streaming, and split-screen multitasking keep creating demand for devices that behave more like pocket tablets than traditional phones. The Neo 5 Max looks designed for that crowd, not for people obsessed with fitting a handset into skinny jeans.

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There is no word yet on pricing or availability, so the real test is whether Nubia can turn the nostalgia of a 7.5-inch screen into a product people actually buy. If it lands in Europe, expect plenty of curiosity – and a few reminders that sometimes the industry circles back to ideas it once tried very hard to bury.
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.
via ixbt.com


