
The horizontal camera bar has officially become the design language of 2025-2026, and Realme just joined the party with the Realme 16. Five months after Apple’s iPhone Air established the aesthetic last September, here comes a mid-range contender wearing the same silhouette like a fashion trend that jumped from runway to high street. The visor-style execution skews closer to Honor’s Magic8 Pro Air, complete with that clean horizontal sweep across the top of the phone. But Realme threw in a wild card: a circular selfie mirror embedded right in the camera module, encircled by a halo flash that adds theatrical flair to an otherwise familiar design.
Calling this phone “Air” anything requires some creative interpretation. The iPhone Air sits at 5.6mm thin, Honor’s version checks in at 6.1mm, and the Realme 16 lands at 8.1mm. That’s practically chunky by comparison, though the 7,000mAh battery inside explains the extra millimeters. At 183 grams, it still feels reasonable in hand despite housing enough power to outlast most flagships by a full day. The mirror feature positions itself as functional, giving you a way to frame selfies using the superior 50MP rear camera instead of the standard front sensor. Whether anyone actually uses it beyond the first Instagram story is the real test.
Designer: Realme

What’s more interesting than the mirror is the engineering required to make it all work. Squeezing a 7,000mAh battery into a body this manageable is no small feat, and it points to some clever internal packaging, what Realme calls an “Aircraft Structure layout” using high-density graphite battery tech. This is the kind of practical innovation that matters in the mid-range space, where two-day battery life is a legitimate killer feature. They even managed to secure an IP66, IP68, and IP69K rating, which means it’s protected against everything from dust to high-pressure water jets. That’s a level of durability you just don’t expect to see on a phone that isn’t a ruggedized brick.

The rest of the package is solidly mid-range. It’s running on a MediaTek Dimensity 6400 Turbo chipset, which is more than capable of keeping things running smoothly on the 6.57-inch AMOLED display. That screen, by the way, boasts a 120Hz refresh rate and an incredibly bright 4,500-nit peak brightness, so it should be perfectly visible even in direct sunlight. The camera system is led by that 50MP Sony IMX852 sensor with OIS, a very respectable piece of hardware for this segment, and it’s paired with a simple 2MP monochrome lens.

So, was the “Air” moniker really necessary? It feels like a stretch when the phone is 1.5x as thick as the devices it’s mimicking. And you have to wonder how much actual design work went into the chassis itself. The silhouette is pure iPhone Air, the camera plateau is straight from Honor’s playbook. Did Realme’s team just slap a mirror on a composite of last season’s hits and call it a day? Maybe. But for a mid-range phone with this much battery, maybe that’s all it needs to be. At its price tag, perhaps nobody minds a design that feels ‘inspired’ as long as it looks the part and lasts for two days.
