• Oukitel WP66 review: An extremely rugged phone that doesn't punis

    From TechnologyDaily@1337:1/100 to All on Thu Jun 18 07:15:33 2026
    Oukitel WP66 review: An extremely rugged phone that doesn't punish you for choosing durability

    Date:
    Thu, 18 Jun 2026 06:10:00 +0000

    Description:
    The Oukitel WP66 is a relatively lightweight rugged phone with a good camera sensor, but not an impressive SoC.

    FULL STORY ======================================================================Oukitel WP66: 30-second review .Oukitel seems to have a particular strategy in the rugged phone market that involves launching lots of products, presumably on the assumption that a percentage of them will find favour with some
    customers.

    The WP66 is at the end of a long list of recent phones, which includes
    devices Ive covered, like the WP61 Plus, WP60 and WP30 Pro. Typically, these devices are affordable, rugged designs which avoid the latest SoC technology but often have some core features that make them attractive. On paper, the WP66 isnt much of a step away from its WP61 Plus predecessor, using the same MediaTek Dimensity 7025 SoC, identical memory and storage sizes, However, the WP66 has roughly half the battery capacity, and that makes it much easier to use as a daily driver.

    With this level of practicality baked in, this is probably Oukitel's most design-aware rugged phone yet. It trades brute bulk for a slimmer profile and adds a neat 1.81-inch secondary display that does real work. The 11,000mAh battery is the headline number, and it delivers genuinely exceptional
    runtime. The Dimensity 7025 is capable enough for daily tasks, but it is not
    a performance chip.

    Camera quality is fine in good light and ordinary in other conditions. At under $450 from the makers, this is a competitive proposition for anyone who needs genuine ruggedness without the usual aesthetic punishment.

    Its mostly the SoC that stops this from being one of the best rugged phones weve seen this year. (Image credit: Mark Pickavance) Oukitel WP66: price and availability How much does it cost? $450/337/390 When is it out? Available
    now Where can you get it? Direct from the maker or via an online retailer Oukitel is one of those phone makers that likes to discount its phones at launch and sets a huge MSRP that the device is never sold at. Doing that in Europe isnt legal, but it's something Chinese phone makers dont appear concerned about. Are you a pro? Subscribe to our newsletter Sign up to the TechRadar Pro newsletter to get all the top news, opinion, features and guidance your business needs to succeed! Contact me with news and offers from other Future brands Receive email from us on behalf of our trusted partners
    or sponsors By submitting your information you agree to the Terms &
    Conditions and Privacy Policy and are aged 16 or over.

    It's available in the US via Oukitel's official site , where the MSRP for the WP66 is $639.99 - but at the time of review, it's down to $450. On Oukitel's UK site , it retailss for 474.99, while currently being discounted to 287.99.

    Considering the specifications and features of this phone, the price seems competitive enough, but how they came up with the MSRP values is a mystery.

    The phone most likely to be compared is the Doogee S200 , as it also has a rear display. The Doogee phone typically sells for $360/285/328 via AliExpress. But the processor in it is less powerful, it has half the storage and cant do 4K video. However, it has twice the battery capacity if you need longer runtime.

    Given the recent price increases for both RAM and storage, the Oukitel WP66
    is probably priced right, but maybe in the next six months, it needs to get a little cheaper to cope with phones with more concurrent technology being released into the busy mid-tier market. (Image credit: Mark Pickavance) Value score: 4/5 Oukitel WP66: Specs Swipe to scroll horizontally

    Item

    Spec

    CPU:

    MediaTek Dimensity 7025 (Octa-core, up to 2.5GHz)

    GPU:

    IMG BXM-8-256 (PowerVR IMG GPU)

    NPU:

    MediaTek NPU 550

    RAM:

    12GB

    Storage:

    512GB

    Screen:

    6.6" IPS TFT 750 nits and 1.8 rear screen

    Resolution:

    1080 x 2408 (FHD+)

    SIM:

    2x Nano SIM, or 1x Nano +TF

    Weight:

    365g

    Dimensions:

    172.2 x 81.0 x 15.8mm

    Rugged Spec:

    IP68 IP69K dust/water resistant (up to 1.5m for 30 min), MIL-STD-810H Certification

    Rear cameras:

    108MP Samsung S5KHM6 (f/1.9, no OIS) + 2MP GalaxyCore GC02M1 macro

    Front camera:

    32MP Sony IMX616

    Networking:

    WiFi 6, Bluetooth 5.3

    OS:

    Android 15

    Battery:

    11,000 mAh battery (Max 33W charge wired, 7.5W Reverse)

    Colours:

    Orange, Black Oukitel WP66: Design Slim for a rugged phone No wireless charging Rear display (Image credit: Mark Pickavance) The WP66 that Oukitel sent was the orange model, and I think this version looks much more interesting than the one with a black colour scheme.

    One oddity I noticed almost immediately is that on the rear of the case is a GT logo, and this also appears on the maker's webpage. But this phone isnt
    the WP66 GT; it's just the WP66, which suggests a change of plan in the
    naming scheme before launch.

    Another chin-scratcher is that this phone has holes in the bottom-right
    corner for a lanyard, but there isnt one in the box. It also comes with a TPU bumper that has a slot for the same purpose.

    Im glad about the bumper, because if it werent attached, the camera cluster would be excessively prominent, with each of the three elements sticking out at least 2mm. The included bumper guaranteed that this phone doesnt have wireless charging, and to confirm that, I removed it and tested for wireless functionality. Thats a shame, because below the camera and rear display, the underside of the WP66 is extremely flat.

    What I liked was that WP66 bucks the rugged phone aesthetic in a meaningful way. Most rugged devices lean into aggressive styling: heavy frames, pronounced corner armour, and military-surplus colour palettes. The WP66 is comparatively restrained. The Orange colourway is vibrant rather than utilitarian, and the Black variant suits a professional context. (Image credit: Mark Pickavance) At 15.8mm thick, this is slim territory for a phone carrying an 11,000mAh battery. The trade-off is visible: the bezels around
    the main display are wider than a mainstream consumer phone would accept in 2026. The screen-to-body ratio sits at roughly 75%. For a rugged device, that is acceptable. For anyone accustomed to modern frameless designs, it might feel dated.

    The secondary display on the rear panel is the most distinctive design element. It sits cleanly within the casing and gives the phone a dual-screen character that most rivals lack entirely.

    Oukitel has packed the rear display with functionality, showing you a calendar, battery status, messages, and a million other things. My only issue with it is that by the time youve scrolled through all the functions to find the one you want, you could have easily turned the phone over and gone directly to that information three or four times over.

    The button layout is by-the-numbers, and the designer has resisted the temptation to add extra buttons when theyre not specifically required. The right side has the power button with integrated fingerprint reader and volume controls, and the left has a single user-definable button and the SIM card slot. The card slot supports a MicroSD card and a Nano SIM, or you can forgo the MicroSD card and use a second Nano SIM. As this phone comes with 512GB of storage, not having a MicroSD card isnt that limiting.

    Overall, for a business user who might want a rugged phone for site visits or other outdoor work, the WP66 is pleasantly restrained, and it's not so big
    and heavy that it couldnt be used as a daily driver. Design score: 4/5
    Oukitel WP66: Hardware MediaTek Dimensity 7025 512GB of storage 11000 mAh battery In other reviews, Ive talked about the current MediaTek strategy that involves taking older technology and rebranding it with relatively small changes to make it look current.

    What they cant paper over is that the Dimensity 7025 is a 6nm SoC, because
    its origins are the Dimensity 930, an SoC that first appeared in 2022.

    Oukitel used this in the WP300 , WP60 and WP55 Pro, so this will be the
    fourth design to use the same platform.

    My view of this silicon is that the CPU is workable, but the PowerVR IMG BXM-8-256 GPU is a poor GPU that struggles with the OpenGL and Vulkan APIs.

    What challenges the GPU in this phone design is that the display is 1080 by 2408 pixels, whereas in the WP60, as an example, it only had a 720 x 1560 pixel screen.

    If you like to game or use more demanding 3D titles, this probably isnt the platform for you, but for everyday use, it works well enough to navigate Android.

    What many people might consider a high point of this design is the 512GB of storage, which is enough when combined with the 12GB of RAM to handle plenty of applications and the data that comes with them. This SoC doesnt have an NPU; instead, it has an APU, which is the CPU and GPU merged to perform a similar function. Thankfully, most AI done from phones is cloud-based anyway. (Image credit: Mark Pickavance) One interesting change from its predecessor
    is that the battery is now rated at 11,000mAh, where the WP58 Pro and WP60
    had 10,000mAh. Thats not a huge increase, but it might take you 10% further depending on how you use it.

    While the makers did source a larger-capacity battery, they didnt find one that charged any faster or delivered more power to other phones.

    Its got the same 33W wired charge and 7.5W reverse-charging specs as the 10000mAh devices, which translates to a full recharge from flat in under two hours.

    Like most of the Oukitel designs Ive seen in the past two years, the WP66 doesnt represent cutting-edge technology. Its assembled from a collection of parts that are chosen based entirely on price, and that create an ensemble of functions that can attract customers at the right cost.

    Oukitel arent the only Chinese rugged phone maker using the same approach or with a selection of middle-of-the-road devices that use older technology, but there arent any huge surprises here for those willing to do their research about this brand. Hardware score: 3.5/5 Oukitel WP66: Cameras 108MP and 2MP
    on the rear 32MP on the front Three cameras in total (Image credit: Mark Pickavance) The Oukitel WP66 has three cameras:

    Rear camera: 108MP Samsung ISOCELL S5KHM6, Macro 2MP GalaxyCore GC02M1 Front camera: 32MP GalaxyCore GC32E1 This is a similar camera arrangement to the WP61 Plus, with the primary sensor being the excellent Samsung S5KHM6, supported by a less-than-epic 2MP macro camera from GalaxyCore. Whats
    missing, and was on the WP61 Plus, is a night vision sensor.

    The primary sensor can produce some top-notch results in bright lighting, ideally outdoors, but it's not as impressive when there is less light. But
    the worst aspect of this design is the 2MP macro camera, a camera that produces results from the dawn of cameras on phones.

    Its grainy, difficult to get the optimal focus and often not worth the
    effort.

    Whats also crushingly disappointing is that even with a 108MP sensor and
    512GB of storage to handle some big recordings, this phone doesnt offer 4K video. The best it can manage is 2K video at 30fps, which, considering the capabilities of the ISOCELL S5KHM6, is pitiful.

    Also, like all the Oukitel phones Ive tried recently, this phone doesnt support Widevine L1, so streaming services are often reduced to 480p resolution.

    You can take good pictures with this phone, but it takes more effort than it should. Oukitel WP66 Camera samples Image 1 of 15 (Image credit: Mark Pickavance) (Image credit: Mark Pickavance) (Image credit: Mark Pickavance) (Image credit: Mark Pickavance) (Image credit: Mark Pickavance) (Image
    credit: Mark Pickavance) (Image credit: Mark Pickavance) (Image credit: Mark Pickavance) (Image credit: Mark Pickavance) (Image credit: Mark Pickavance) (Image credit: Mark Pickavance) (Image credit: Mark Pickavance) (Image
    credit: Mark Pickavance) (Image credit: Mark Pickavance) (Image credit: Mark Pickavance) Camera score: 3.5/5 Oukitel WP66: Performance 6nm SoC Mid-tier performance Swipe to scroll horizontally

    Phone



    Oukitel WP66

    Oukitel WP61 Plus

    SoC



    MediaTek Dimensity 7025

    MediaTek Dimensity 7025

    GPU



    IMG BXM-8-256

    IMG BXM-8-256

    NPU



    MediaTek's APU 780

    MediaTek's APU 780

    Memory



    12GB/512GB

    12GB/512GB

    Weight



    365g

    656g

    Battery



    11000

    20000

    Geekbench

    Single

    897

    959



    Multi

    2296

    2362



    OpenCL

    156

    failed



    Vulkan

    137

    failed

    PCMark

    3.0 Score

    10912

    13080



    Battery

    27h 27m (20%)

    32h 7m + 25%

    Charge 30

    %

    33

    28

    Passmark

    Score

    6691

    6620



    CPU

    5391

    5284

    3DMark

    Slingshot OGL

    3592

    3741



    Slingshot Ex. OGL

    2549

    3738



    Slingshot Ex. Vulkan

    2490

    2614 Row 19 - Cell 0

    Wildlife

    1447

    Failed Row 20 - Cell 0

    Nomad Lite

    131

    Failed Even if initially, this looks like a pointless comparison, since both phones use the same SoC, there is some interesting data in these tests to examine. For most benchmarks, the difference between the two is within the standard deviation.

    But its interesting to note that now running Android 16, the WP66 can run Wildlife and Nomad Lite, where the WP61 Plus, which was also running the same OS, could not. The obvious conclusion is that the WP61 Plus launched with
    some issues that may have been resolved, or that UL has tweaked 3DMark to
    make it more forgiving.

    This isnt to say that the WP66 runs either of the benchmarks well, but at least it pops out a number. It also succeeds on GeekBench for OpenGL and Vulkan, where it previously failed on the WP61 Plus, but the numbers are
    still horrible. The IMG BXM-8-256 isnt a GPU anyone would want if they got a choice.

    What I found most fascinating about these results was the battery
    performance, with the WP61 Plus running longer than the WP66. Thats not much of a revelation given the relative battery capacities, but it is worth noting that the WP61 Plus lasts only 17% longer despite having nearly twice the battery capacity.

    This makes little sense, since they use a practically identical platform, and if I still had the WP61 Plus, Id be curious to see what it was when running that used up the battery. It would be guesswork to pin this on any aspect of that phone, but it does suggest that the WP66 may be in a better place at launch than its predecessor.

    Looking at these numbers overall, neither of these phones is ideal for gaming or VR, since the GPU cant offer the range of features that more modern
    silicon can.

    Battery life is decent, but everything else is bordering on an entry-level performance envelope. Performance score: 3.5/5 (Image credit: Oukitel)
    Oukitel WP66: Final verdict The Oukitel WP66 is the rugged phone that does
    not punish you for choosing durability. The slim profile, the secondary display, and the extraordinary battery life form a compelling package. The Dimensity 7025 processor is an honest mid-range device that does support 5G, but isnt a gaming platform.

    The camera is capable in daylight and ordinary in poor light. The 33W
    charging rate is the one frustrating limitation in an otherwise well-considered design. At the launch price of $450, this is one of the more interesting propositions in the mid-market rugged segment.

    With Oukitel having so many phones in the WP series, the company's shotgun approach aims to make a handset thats perfect for most customers. The WP66 is aimed at those who want a rugged phone without impractical size or weight. It manages that, and it even shows off a little with its rear-facing display.

    Im just not convinced that with such relatively old technology on the SoC, there is much longevity to be had. There are similarly priced rugged phones with better cameras and newer silicon for those who can spot them. The WP66 has a platform on its fourth outing for Oukitel, and that might be one or two bites of that cherry more than the Dimensity 7025 deserves. Should I buy a Oukitel WP66? Swipe to scroll horizontally Oukitel WP66 Score Card

    Attributes

    Notes

    Rating

    Value

    No an excessive price for the spec

    4/5

    Design

    Slim for a rugged phone; secondary display is a standout touch

    4/5

    Hardware

    The fourth time Oukitel used this SoC

    3.5/5

    Camera

    Good 108MP primary camera sensor, poor Macro, but only 2K video

    3.5/5

    Performance

    Dimensity 7025 handles daily use; not a gaming chip

    3.5/5

    Overall

    Other than the rear display, a bit forgetable

    3.5/5 Buy it if... You need a phone for outdoors The water and dust
    resistance on the Oukitel WP66 is enough to handle submersion and drops. And, its not too large to fit in a pocket, or too heavy to carry. You carry lots
    of data or apps With 512GB of storage and 16GB of RAM, this phone is ideal
    for those who like to carry data and install numerous apps. And, if you give up a SIM card slot, you can add a MicroSD card for even more space. Don't buy it if... You need the best video The sensors on this phone aren't bad, but they're not exploited fully by the phone. With a 108MP sensor, video capture is capped at only 2K resolution. If you record video, you will want a design that can capture 4K. You use demanding apps Hardcore gamers and VR users will find the GPU in the WP66 is underpowered. There isnt any way to fix this with 2022 SoC technology under the skin. Also Consider Blackview Oscal Tank 1 An inexpensive phone with a 20000 mAh. But in this case, it comes with a
    superior SoC platform and a better camera cluster. Therefore, you get 4K
    video recording on both rear and front sensors, and you also get an SoC that supports 5G comms.

    Read my full Blackview Oscal Tank 1 review View Deal RugOne Xever 7 Pro A RugOne design with swappable battery technology, but smaller batteries. The one critical advantage of this design is its thermal imaging camera. However, it costs more than the WP66, because of that feature.

    Read my RugOne Xever 7 Pro review For more ruggedized devices, we've
    reviewed the best rugged tablets , the best rugged laptops , and the best rugged hard drives Oukitel WP66: Price Comparison 287.99 View No price information Check Amazon We check over 250 million products every day for the best prices powered by



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