OPPO has unveiled its latest foldable smartphone, the Find N6, with a clear focus on solving one of the category’s most persistent issues: the visible crease.

The company claims the new model introduces a “zero-feel” crease, aiming to deliver a flatter and more seamless display experience than previous foldables. While crease reduction has been a long-standing goal across the industry, OPPO is positioning this as a meaningful step forward rather than an incremental tweak.

At the centre of that claim is a redesigned hinge system, built using a combination of precision scanning and layered 3D printing techniques to minimise unevenness. The result, according to OPPO, is a hinge structure with significantly tighter tolerances than typical designs, helping reduce the appearance of a fold line over time. The device is also rated for up to one million folds under testing conditions, signalling a continued push to address durability concerns that still linger around foldables.

The Find N6 pairs that hardware with an 8.12-inch internal display and a 6.62-inch outer screen, both designed for high brightness and low-light comfort. The device is notably slim for a book-style foldable, reflecting a broader trend among manufacturers to make foldables feel closer to conventional smartphones when closed.

Beyond the display, OPPO is leaning heavily into performance and imaging. The handset runs on Qualcomm’s Snapdragon 8 Elite Gen 5 platform and includes a 6,000mAh battery, supported by fast wired and wireless charging. Camera hardware is another highlight, with a 200MP main sensor leading a triple-lens system co-developed with Hasselblad. All rear cameras support 4K Dolby Vision recording, with higher frame rate options available on the primary sensor.

Software and multitasking also play a central role in the Find N6 experience. OPPO’s updated interface allows multiple apps to run simultaneously in resizable windows, taking advantage of the larger internal screen. The addition of a stylus, branded as the OPPO AI Pen, further pushes the device toward productivity use cases, with features that extend beyond note-taking into content capture and basic AI-assisted editing.

There is also a clear emphasis on cross-device functionality, with support for file transfers, screen mirroring and remote access across both Mac and Windows systems.

The Find N6 will be available in Australia from mid-April, priced at $3,299, with the optional AI Pen sold separately for $199. That places it firmly at the premium end of the market, where foldables are still competing to justify both their price and their practicality.

Whether OPPO’s approach to reducing the crease proves as effective in everyday use as it does in testing will likely determine how much impact the Find N6 has in an increasingly competitive foldable space.