Orange renders of OPPO Find X9 Ultra (欧珀) leak ahead of Hasselblad (哈苏) event
What surfaced and when
It has been reported that a set of renders showing an orange version of the OPPO Find X9 Ultra (OPPO, 欧珀) surfaced on X on April 9 from leaker @RODENT950, and that OPPO will unveil the handset at an OPPO × Hasselblad (哈苏) imaging event on April 21, 2026 at 19:00. The new images reportedly switch the previously leaked dual‑material, vertical‑logo look to a single‑tone finish with a horizontally placed logo; Hasselblad’s “H” mark is clearly visible. Leaks like this are common ahead of China’s big phone launches, but the attention here is less about color and more about camera hardware.
Imaging pushed to the fore
Imaging is positioned as the phone’s key competitive edge. It has been reported that the Find X9 Ultra will use a 1/1.12‑inch Sony LYT‑901 main sensor with an f/1.5 aperture, paired with a 200MP OmniVision OV52A periscope telephoto, a 50MP ultra‑wide and a second 50MP telephoto module. The Hasselblad partnership and that sensor stack suggest OPPO is aiming squarely at photographers and content creators — can a bold orange finish help it stand out in a crowded flagship field? Maybe, but users will likely decide based on image quality rather than hue.
Core specs and wider context
Beyond cameras, the handset reportedly packs Qualcomm’s Snapdragon 8 Elite Gen 5, up to 16GB of RAM, a 6.82‑inch 2K LTPO AMOLED display with a 144Hz refresh rate, a 7,050mAh battery and 100W wired charging. For Western readers: Snapdragon chips come from a US company and remain a common choice for top Chinese phones, even as broader U.S. export controls and trade tensions have complicated access to some advanced semiconductor technologies. Those geopolitical headwinds have nudged Chinese OEMs to diversify suppliers and invest in domestic capabilities, but mainstream mobile SoCs are still widely used.
These renders are unconfirmed until OPPO (欧珀) shows the phone on stage. For now, the leak gives a clear picture of OPPO’s priorities: ambitious camera hardware, big battery life, and a new colorway to capture headlines. Will the orange finish translate to sales? We’ll know after April 21 — and after reviewers test the Hasselblad‑tuned imaging stack in real life.
