Ulefone Power Armor 18 Ultra Review

The Ulefone Power Armor 18 Ultra offers a 9600mAh battery and 24GB of RAM at $549, but its low brand score and major carrier exclusions make it a risky buy for most.

Screen Size 6.6
Refresh Rate 120
Processor Dimensity 7050
RAM 24 GB
Storage 512 GB
Rear Camera Mp 108
Front Camera Mp 32
Five G Yes
Operating System Android 13
Ulefone Power Armor 18 Ultra cellphone
47.2 Общая оценка

The 30-Second Version

The Ulefone Power Armor 18 Ultra packs a 96th-percentile display and a massive 9600mAh battery into a $549 package. It's a spec beast with 24GB RAM and 512GB storage, but it's held back by low brand recognition and major US carrier incompatibility. Buy it for the unparalleled battery and storage; skip it if you need reliable service on AT&T or Verizon.

Overview

The Ulefone Power Armor 18 Ultra is a phone that leads with its spec sheet. You're looking at a 6.6-inch 120Hz display, a massive 24GB of RAM, and 512GB of storage that you can expand up to 2TB. That's a lot of numbers, and they land this phone in the 96th percentile for display and the 91st for features in our database. But the real headline is the 9600mAh battery, which promises to be the main event for anyone tired of daily charging. It's a spec monster wrapped in a rugged-ish shell, and it's priced at a very interesting $549.

That price point is where things get spicy. For about the same money, you could get a Samsung Galaxy S25 FE or a Google Pixel. Those are mainstream brands with polished software and better cameras on paper. The Power Armor 18 Ultra takes a different path. It gives you niche features like an FM radio that works without headphones, underwater camera modes, and that colossal battery. It's a phone built for a very specific kind of user who prioritizes endurance and raw storage over brand recognition.

Performance

Performance is solid, landing in the 85th percentile overall. The MediaTek Dimensity 7050 chipset paired with that 24GB of RAM is a capable combo. It's not going to beat the latest flagship Snapdragons in raw speed tests, but for everyday tasks and even some gaming, it's more than enough. The 120Hz display feels smooth, and having that much RAM means you can keep dozens of apps open without a hiccup. Where this phone really performs is in its stamina. That 9600mAh battery puts it in the 80th percentile, which in real terms means you're probably looking at two or even three days of use on a single charge. That's the trade-off for the thicker build.

Performance Percentiles

Build 41.6
Camera 89
Battery 72.1
Display 95.5
Feature 89.9
Performance 85.8
Connectivity 90.3
Social Proof 5.8

Pros & Cons

Pros

  • Massive 9600mAh battery for multi-day use (80th percentile). 96th
  • Huge 24GB RAM and 512GB expandable storage for power users. 90th
  • Excellent 120Hz display quality (96th percentile). 90th
  • Packed with niche features like headphone-free FM radio and NFC (91st percentile). 89th
  • Strong 5G and Wi-Fi connectivity (89th percentile).

Cons

  • Brand recognition and social proof are extremely low (5th percentile). 6th
  • Build quality percentile is middling at 42nd, so 'rugged' might be a stretch.
  • The Dimensity 7050 is capable but not a top-tier gaming chip.
  • Camera system, while high-megapixel, ranks 88th percentile against tougher competition.
  • Major carrier incompatibility in the US (no AT&T, Verizon).

Specifications

Full Specifications

Display

Screen Size 6.6
Resolution 2408 x 1080
Refresh Rate 120 Hz

Performance

Processor ??? Dimensity 7050
Processor Model Dimensity 7050
RAM 24 MB
Storage 512 GB
Expandable Yes

Camera

Main Camera 108
Front Camera 32

Battery & Charging

Connector USB Type-C

Connectivity

5G Yes
Wi-Fi Wi-Fi
NFC No
USB USB Type-C
SIM Nano SIM

Design & Build

Face Recognition No
OS Android 13

Value & Pricing

At $549, the value proposition is all about what you prioritize. You're not paying for a brand name here. You're paying for a huge battery, an absurd amount of RAM and storage, and a screen that's better than most phones at this price. If your budget is $550 and your top needs are battery life and not running out of space, this phone delivers specs that mainstream brands simply don't offer at this price. Just know you're trading off some polish, software update certainty, and carrier compatibility for those raw numbers.

549 $

vs Competition

Let's put it next to its $550 peers. The Samsung Galaxy S25 FE will have a better camera system, a more refined software experience with longer update support, and it'll work on all carriers. But it'll have maybe half the RAM, a third of the battery capacity, and no expandable storage. The Google Pixel offers arguably the best camera software and clean Android, but again, with smaller battery and storage. The OnePlus 15 might match it on performance but not on battery size. The Ulefone wins on paper specs for power users and battery life enthusiasts, but loses on ecosystem, support, and network compatibility. It's a spreadsheet phone versus a convenience phone.

Spec Ulefone Power Armor 18 Ultra Samsung Samsung Galaxy S26 SM-S948UZKEXAA Motorola Moto G PB6V0014US Google Google Pixel 10 GA10091-US OnePlus OnePlus 15 5011116281 Apple Unlocked iPhone 15/15 Plus MTLY3LL/A
Screen Size 6.6 6.9 6.7 6.4 6.8 6.1
Display Type - OLED AMOLED OLED OLED OLED
Refresh Rate 120 120 120 120 120 60
Processor Dimensity 7050 Snapdragon® 8 Elite Gen 5 for Galaxy Snapdragon® 6 Gen 3 Mobile Platform Tensor 8 Elite Gen 5 A16
RAM (GB) 24 12 8 16 16 -
Storage (GB) 512 512 1024 256 512 128
Rear Camera Mp 108 200 50 48 50 48
Front Camera Mp 32 12 32 10 32 -
Battery Capacity Mah - 5000 5000 5015 7300 -
Charging Wattage - 60 68 - - -
Wireless Charging - true true - - -
Five (g) true true true true true true
Water Resistance - IP68 IP68 IP68 IP69 -
Operating System Android 13 Android 16 Android 15 Android 16 Android 16 iPadOS 17
Compare Compare Compare Compare Compare

Common Questions

Q: Is the Ulefone Power Armor 18 Ultra good for gaming?

It's decent. Our data scores it 58.5/100 specifically for gaming. The Dimensity 7050 and 120Hz screen handle most games well, but it's not in the top tier for sustained peak performance. The 24GB of RAM is overkill for gaming alone.

Q: How rugged is this 'rugged' phone?

Not as rugged as you might think. Its 'build' score is only in the 42nd percentile in our database, and its specific 'rugged' score is a low 26.3/100. It has some toughened features, but don't expect it to survive a serious drop onto concrete like a dedicated rugged phone would.

Q: Will this phone work with my carrier?

You must check carefully. The listing states it does NOT work on AT&T, Cricket, Verizon, Sprint, Straight Talk, or Boost. It should work on T-Mobile and its MVNOs (like Mint Mobile), but 5G compatibility may vary. Always confirm band support with your specific carrier before buying.

Who Should Skip This

Skip this phone if you're on AT&T or Verizon—it just won't work. Also skip it if you're not a technical user comfortable with a niche brand. The 5th percentile social proof score means there's little community or proven long-term support. If you prioritize a sleek design, the 42nd percentile build quality and thick battery-focused body won't appeal. Finally, if camera quality is your top concern, while the 108MP sensor sounds great, its 88th percentile ranking suggests it's beaten by cameras in similarly priced mainstream phones.

Verdict

We can recommend the Ulefone Power Armor 18 Ultra, but with a big, data-backed asterisk. If you are a technical user who values the spec sheet—specifically battery capacity and storage—above all else, and you're on a compatible network (like T-Mobile or its MVNOs), this phone is a fascinating and powerful option for the money. Its 96th percentile display and 91st percentile feature set are legit. However, if you value brand reliability, long-term software support, or need it to work on AT&T or Verizon, the 5th percentile social proof and carrier limitations are a deal-breaker. Look at the Samsung or Google instead.