Book-style foldables aim to give you a tablet that folds and slips into your pocket. You hit moments where pulling out a full tablet or laptop feels like overkill. Still, from time to time, a line of text looks off on a foldable, and you notice it sits right on the crease. That’s the issue the OPPO Find N6 wants to fix—enter the Zero-Feel Crease claim.
Samsung and Huawei led the foldable push in 2019, and both now chase bigger and more expensive tri-fold designs. OPPO takes a different path. The OPPO Find N6 buzz is growing because it promises thoughtful upgrades that could win over a wide range of users, even those who stick with the Z Fold line.
Where the crease disappears

OPPO Find N6
“OPPO is debuting the industry’s first Zero-Feel Crease.”
Owners of multiple Galaxy Fold devices often say the crease never stays the same as day one. With use, it stands out more. That creates a problem, since I always tell people to factor in how visible the crease looks. It should not pull you out of the experience. That’s where OPPO’s engineering work comes in.
OPPO brings in a new hinge design that makes the fold hard to spot, smoothing out the dip you would expect to see. This kind of progress took years, and brands have made this promise many times over the life of foldables. If you plan to jot notes at work or outside with the OPPO AI Pen, you will value a flat surface. Many users say the crease shows up most when light hits the screen from above or during pen use.
OPPO tackles the screen surface with its 2nd-Generation Titanium Flexion Hinge. It uses a 3D Liquid Printing method that targets tiny structural flaws. The company says this cuts height variation under the display by 75%, which gives it a near crease-free look and feel.
After checking photos from a hands-on demo, I agree with OPPO’s Zero-Feel Crease claim. Users say the jump from the N5 to the N6 feels huge. The display feels firm and solid, not soft or plastic, even though plastic still sits there.
A pen that does more than write
Even if art is not your thing, a stylus still adds value. I don’t draw, but I enjoy the control it gives for taps or games. Web browsing also feels better with a pen. Samsung left out pen support on the Galaxy Z Fold7.The company removed the digitizer layer to make the phone thinner and lighter, which marks the first time since the Z Fold3 that S Pen support is gone. That makes OPPO’s AI Pen stand out. It uses Gemini Pro to turn handwritten notes into clean tables.
I like how the OPPO AI Pen cuts time spent on rework and lets you move forward. It can turn rough notes into clean charts and shape simple sketches into proper diagrams. Your ideas stay the same, but they look clearer and share with ease. That covers just one use case, and OPPO shares more in a full article.
OPPO sells the AI Pen on its own. Motorola also showed a phablet-style foldable, the razr fold, at CES 2026, and it supports a stylus that you buy on its own.
The choice gets harder
OPPO plans to roll out the Find N6 across global markets starting March 20, 2026, though details about a US launch still remain unclear. You’ll find the N6 through official OPPO stores, select retailers, and carrier partners in many regions.
I feel the pull toward the Find N6 because it tackles two pain points that often hold foldables back—the crease and stylus support. A screen that looks and feels flat changes how you use the device day to day, and the AI Pen adds value beyond simple note-taking.
At the same time, OPPO gives the Find N6 solid protection with IP56 | IP58 | IP59 ratings, which cover dust and water resistance across different conditions. That adds a layer of confidence for everyday use, even if it doesn’t reach full dust sealing. Still, the Google Pixel 10 Pro Fold stays in the conversation. Its IP68 rating gives it a clear edge in durability, which counts if you plan to rely on a foldable as your main device.
Related: Google Pixel 10 Pro Fold vs. Samsung Galaxy Z Fold7: Which foldable wins your wallet?
Grigor Baklajyan is a copywriter covering technology at Gadget Flow. His contributions include product reviews, buying guides, how-to articles, and more.

