iPhone 17 Pro Max
Battery Life King
Apple has redefined 'all-day battery' with the 17 Pro Max. While heavy, the trade-off for its monstrous stamina and the deeply impressive 48MP 'Fusion' camera system is one we'd take every time.
Pros
- Category-leading battery
- 'Fusion' camera leap
- A19 Pro chip
Cons
- Noticeably heavier
- Expensive
The iPhone 17 Pro Max is very much a statement piece – the kind of phone that feels like a minor upgrade on paper, but a big one the moment you hold it and start using it.
The new aluminium unibody design is the first thing you notice. It feels excellent, almost "machined" in the hand, with cleaner lines and a more industrial look than previous models.
The trade-off is weight: it's noticeably heavier than the old titanium version, so this isn't the phone for someone who wants something featherlight. But if you like your tech to feel substantial and expensive, it absolutely delivers.
On the front, the 6.9-inch ProMotion display is the sort of screen that spoils you for anything else. It's brighter, so outdoor visibility is no longer a struggle, and the ultra-smooth refresh rate makes everything from scrolling through social feeds to flicking around home screens feel effortless. Paired with iOS 26, which leans into richer animations and smarter widgets, the whole experience feels fluid and immediate.
The real headline, though, is battery life. Apple has clearly decided to stop chasing marginal gains and go for something dramatic: two full days of heavy use isn't a marketing line here, it's the defining characteristic of the phone.
Streaming, navigation, photography, social apps – it just keeps going. For anyone tired of living next to a charger or carrying a power bank, this alone could justify the upgrade.
Then there's the new 48MP "Fusion" camera system. The extra resolution isn't just about bigger files; it feeds into sharper, more detailed photos and more flexible cropping. The star of the show is the new 8x optical zoom, which stays impressively crisp where digital zoom on older phones would turn into a blurry mess.
It makes distant subjects – stage performances, kids on a pitch, city skylines – feel much more reachable. Low-light shots benefit too, with cleaner detail and less mushy noise than previous generations.
On the front, the upgraded camera with "Centre Stage" finally makes group selfies and video calls feel natural. The broader field of view and clever framing mean you can include more people without the classic arm-stretched, distorted look, and it does a good job of keeping faces framed as people move around.
For creators, this is the new default tool. You get a big, colour-accurate canvas for editing, a camera system that can handle everything from casual snaps to serious content, and a battery that won't quit halfway through a shooting day.
It's not the most discreet or lightweight phone out there, but if you want a device that looks the part, lasts for ages and is ready to capture almost anything you throw at it, the iPhone 17 Pro Max fits that role perfectly.