What is the Huawei Mate 10 Pro?
If you’re on the market for a new phablet, but don’t want to spend the small fortune required to get a Galaxy Note 8 or iPhone X, then the Huawei Mate 10 Pro may well be your next phone.
The Mate 10 Pro is the only phablet the company’s currently selling in the UK, with Huawei having chosen not to range its slightly more affordable, regular Huawei Mate 10.
The Pro offers fantastic hardware, with highlights including a Mobile HDR-ready OLED screen, super-fast CPU, more memory than you can shake a stick at, and excellent battery life.
This plus its wallet-friendly (relatively speaking) £699 price tag make it a compelling choice for any fan of big-screen phones. My only minor quibble is that the Mate 10 Pro’s EMUI Android skin still comes with a load of annoying, niggling flaws.

Huawei Mate 10 Pro – Design
The Huawei Mate 10 Pro has a close-to-identical design to the regular Mate 10, which is no bad thing.
The design takes the same mixed metal-and-glass approach as the Galaxy Note 8or iPhone X. The slightly curved glass back, coupled with the sturdy metal sides and near-bezel-less front, makes the Pro one of the prettiest phablets on the market. The slim bezel also means the Pro doesn’t feel terribly unwieldy, despite packing a 6-inch screen.
Outside of this you’ll find all the trimmings expected of a 2017 flagship. On the back, just below the dual Leica-branded cameras, you’ll find a fingerprint scanner, which during my tests proved fast and reliable.
At the bottom you’ll see the increasingly common USB-C charging port and a speaker which, while not the loudest around, is more than good enough for video calling.
Build quality is also excellent. Unlike on cheaper phones the glass back here offers next to no flex and is surprisingly scratch-resistant. After accidentally throwing it in a pocket alongside loose change, the Pro emerged unscathed. The IP67 certification also rang true, with the Pro surviving my attempt to drown it in a kitchen. I still wouldn’t trust the glass back to survive a drop onto a hard surface, however.
The 128GB of inbuilt storage is also more than big enough for most users, and means the absence of a microSD card slot isn’t that big of a deal.
My only minor quibble with the phone’s design is that, unlike its sibling the Mate 10, the Pro doesn’t have a 3.5mm headphone jack. I know I’m fighting a losing battle, as everyone has already jumped on Apple’s ‘no 3.5mm’ bandwagon, but for me and many music fans, the port’s absence is still a sticking point.

Huawei Mate 10 Pro – Display
The big difference between the Mate 10 Pro and the regular mate 10 is that the Pro has an OLED, not LCD, screen.
Specifically the Pro comes with a 6-inch HD+ HDR 10 OLED display, while the regular Mate 10 comes with a more basic 5.8-inch quad-HD HDR10 LCD screen.
Some people may complain about the seemingly lower resolution, but the truth is that the Pro’s 2160 x 1080 pixel count is more than good enough. Even if you try your absolute hardest you’re not going to spot individual pixels.
The OLED panel is also one of the best on the market at the moment. Unlike Google’s Pixel 2 XL, the screen isn’t horribly calibrated and, while a smidgen warm, colours generally look nicely vibrant without making the jump into oversaturated territory.
Whites aren’t as clean as a well-set-up IPS panel, but they’re not the dirtiest I’ve seen on an OLED and are pleasingly free from the yellow or blue shift I see on competing AMOLED-screened phones. Blacks are also nicely inky.
Brightness levels are also insanely high and meet the Mobile HDR 10 standard. However, given the current lack of high-dynamic-range content available to the Mate 10 Pro, I can’t currently comment on HDR performance.
On the whole, the Mate 10 Pro’s screen is one of the best you’ll find at this price point.
Huawei Mate 10 Pro – Software
Huawei’s always struggled with mobile software, thanks to its insistence on using its own EMUI skin. Traditionally this has warped whatever Android version its laid over to near unrecognisable levels, making needles UI changes and adding more third-party bloatware and duplicate apps than could easily be counted.
Despite coming on leaps and bounds, and Huawei having managed to load the Pro with the Google’s latest Android 8 Oreo software, this problem remains the same on the Mate 10 Pro. Emotion UI still completely reworks key things, like Android’s settings menu, making it difficult to find the exact option you’re looking for. It also removes the app tray from the main menu.
Despite a radically reduced amount of bloatware, you’ll also still find pointless duplicate applications for things like music, calendar and messaging that offer at best equivalent features to Android’s native apps.

Huawei Mate 10 Pro – Performance
The only positive software additions I can spot focus on the Mate 10 Pro’s new AI-infused Kirin 970 processor.
According to Huawei its latest eight-core CPU comes with a specially made ‘Neural processing unit’ that adds a number of performance optimising ‘AI’ features. The unit apparently lets the phone learn and eventually predict your usage patterns to preemptively launch or tweak applications to meet your needs.
As an added perk the AI will also know when to shut down unneeded processes to save battery and avoid performance degradation over time. I won’t be able to confirm Huawei’s performance-degradation claims until I’ve used the phone a little longer – it’s usually a few months before you notice any slowdown – but during my fortnight with the Mate 10 Pro, I’ve found it to be wonderfully nippy.
Paired with 6GB of RAM, which quite frankly is overkill on a phone, the Kirin chipset blitzed through every task I threw at it. Multi-tab web browsing was slick, and apps and games opened within milliseconds. Phone calls were stable and pleasingly free of dropouts, and the Mate 10 Pro played demanding 3D games smoothly. Its EMUI software is also stabler than past versions I’ve tested, and outside of a couple of application crashes I’m yet to experience any serious bugs or glitches.
The Mate 10 Pro’s synthetic benchmark scores mirrored my real-world experience and matched the performance of competing 2017 flagships. You can see how its scores compare to the Galaxy S8 in the table below.
Phone | Antutu | Geekbench single-core | Geekbench multi-core |
Huawei Mate 10 Pro | 178091 | 1906 | 6740 |
Galaxy S8 | 173292 | 2013 | 6659 |
My only slight concern is that, with prolonged intensive use, the Pro does begin to noticeably heat up. Looping Riptide GP2 I did notice some CPU throttling after an hour, though given how few people I can see running games for that long, this isn’t a huge deal.
Huawei Mate 10 Pro – Camera
Huawei claims the Kirin CPU’s AI chops also apply to the phone’s dual rear cameras, which comprise a 12-megapixel colour sensor and a dedicated 20-megapixel monochrome camera.
Specifically, Huawei claims the chip lets the camera jump modes depending on what you’re taking a picture of. If you’re taking a close-up shot of a flower, it’ll know to jump to macro mode, for example.
In general I found the auto-detection features were a little slow, and after a few days I found myself manually switching for more specific settings. But the camera remains impressive nonetheless, especially when compared to the previous-gen Huawei P10 and Huawei P10 Plus.
The camera app feels significantly faster than on past Huawei phones, and has a more intelligently laid-out UI. Photos taken in regular light are wonderfully sharp and don’t look overprocessed. Low-light performance has also been significantly improved. The wider f/1.6 aperture and addition of OIS, coupled with a few under-the-hood software improvements mean that, though shutter speeds drop, photos taken in low light are a lot less noisy and generally good enough for sharing on social media.
Like that on the regular Mate 10, the camera does still have a few minor issues keeping it from beating the Galaxy S8 and Pixel 2 on photo performance. Colours begin to distort in difficult mixed light conditions and the autofocus can go a little haywire in difficult lighting. Contrast in low light also remains an issue, though being fair to Huawei this is a problem on all the phones we test.
Video recording is a similar story and works well enough in good lighting but can struggle in darker conditions, as the Pro’s stabilisation isn’t the most reliable around.
You can see sample photos taken on the Mate 10 Pro below.





Huawei Mate 10 Pro – Battery
Battery life is one area in which the Huawei Mate 10 Pro excels. Featuring a giant 4000mAh cell, you’ll struggle to find a phone with an equivalent, let alone larger, battery.
I managed to get between one and a half to two days of life out of the Pro with regular use, which is pretty good by today’s standards. Regular use entailed listening to music on my morning and evening commute, making and taking a few calls, constant messaging on WhatsApp, regularly checking my email and social media feeds, a quick half-hour gaming session, and watching a few shows on Netflix before bed.
Video playback performance is also very impressive. When streaming video the Mate 10 Pro lost 8-10% of its charge per hour. Video playback was even more impressive with locally stored video. I managed to watch the entire second series of Stranger Things on a long-haul flight, with charge to spare.
Gaming performance was equally impressive. Playing demanding 3D games like Riptide and Asphalt, the Mate 10 Pro lost an average of 15-18% of its charge, which again is above average.

Why buy the Huawei Mate 10 Pro?
If you’re on the market for a top-end phablet, but don’t want to spend the extortionate cost of a Galaxy Note 8 or iPhone X, the Mate 10 Pro is the best option available.
As a piece of hardware the Mate 10 Pro is a gorgeous device, offering users slick performance, an above-average camera and excellent battery life, all contained in a slick mixed metal-and-glass design.
The only downside is its slightly lacklustre EMUI software, which messes with Android’s stellar UI and adds unwanted and unneeded duplicate apps.
Verdict
The Huawei Mate 10 Pro offers buyers fantastic hardware and OK software.
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