iPhone 18 Pro Max leaks sold me on Dark Cherry before Apple even announced it

iPhone 18 Pro Max leaks sold me on Dark Cherry before Apple even announced it

iPhone 18 Pro Max leaks sold me on Dark Cherry before Apple even announced it
Image Credit: Jon Rettinger

Apple’s color choices rarely dominate the conversation before a launch, yet the iPhone 18 Pro Max has flipped that script months ahead of its fall debut. A fresh batch of iPhone 18 Pro Max leaks has given us our clearest look yet at the flagship, and one shade in particular has me eyeing an upgrade far earlier than my wallet would like.

Dark Cherry is the one I’d buy

Tech insider Jon Rettinger shared the standout reveal, posting what appear to be actual photos of the device in a finish he calls Dark Cherry. He also published shots of Light Blue and Black variants, and he was upfront that no AI tools touched the images. The Dark Cherry tone reads vibrant without tipping into flashy territory, landing somewhere between executive restraint and a confident splash of personality.

The cherry direction lines up with what other leakers have signaled for months. Sonny Dickson, who nailed last year’s iPhone 17 palette almost exactly, posted dummy units pointing toward the same color, while Mark Gurman has reported a deep red sitting at the front of Apple’s testing. To me, cherry feels like the natural successor to Cosmic Orange—bold enough to stand out, restrained enough to age well.

About that black model

One wrinkle worth noting concerns the Black option in Rettinger’s photos. Separate reports have suggested Apple is saving black for its first foldable iPhone while steering the Pro line toward warmer hues, so a black Pro Max in these images muddies the picture a little. I’d treat the darker variant as the least certain of the three until more corroboration shows up.

The design plays it safe, and I’m okay with that

Apple looks set to carry over the iPhone 17 Pro blueprint rather than reinvent it. The aluminum unibody with a rear glass insert for wireless charging stays, though leakers expect Apple to color-match the glass and metal so closely that the seam nearly disappears at any angle. The Dynamic Island may also shrink by roughly half as Apple tucks part of the Face ID array under the display, while screen sizes hold at 6.3 inches for the Pro and 6.9 inches for the Pro Max.

Coming from someone who wants a phone that vanishes into a jacket pocket, a familiar silhouette suits me fine. A radical redesign every year tends to age the previous model overnight, and a steady shape keeps last season’s flagship feeling current.

The camera is where it gets interesting

The camera system carries the most meaningful upgrade. Ming-Chi Kuo reports that the main wide lens gains a variable aperture, letting the sensor regulate how much light reaches it, though the ultrawide and telephoto sit out the change for now. That new optic costs about 50% more than Apple’s current high-end lens, with Sunny Optical supplying a chunk of the components alongside primary partner Largan.

As someone who shoots in messy indoor lighting, manual command over depth of field is the feature I’ve wanted for years. A swing from a crisp landscape to a creamy background without software trickery would change how I frame almost everything.

Chip, RAM, and a battery that barely budges

Under the hood, the A20 Pro chip built on a 2 nm process should power both models, paired with 12 GB of RAM and 256 GB of storage at the base. Battery gains stay modest, sadly. Digital Chat Station pegs the Pro Max near 5,000 mAh with a SIM slot and around 5,200 mAh on the eSIM-only version, a bump of roughly 100 mAh over its predecessor.

An extra 100 mAh won’t reshape my day, and I’d happily accept a slightly thicker chassis for a meatier cell. Still, a 2 nm chip and efficiency-focused modems should stretch everyday endurance further than the raw number suggests.

Satellite data and a quieter connectivity story

Connectivity sees a subtle shift worth flagging. Apple’s own C2 modem handles cellular while the N2 chip manages Wi-Fi, Bluetooth, and Thread for smart-home gear. Aaron Tilley and Wayne Ma of The Information report that the iPhone 18 Pro could send and receive data over satellite, though the Globalstar deal behind the feature hasn’t been locked in.

The satellite angle excites me most of all. I spend enough weekends outside reliable coverage to appreciate any lifeline that doesn’t depend on a nearby tower, even one stuck behind a deal that Apple still needs to close.

The price talk nobody enjoys

Rising memory costs and the pricier camera module are squeezing Apple’s margins, and Kuo expects the company to fight hard to hold the line. Current targets land near $1,100 for the iPhone 18 Pro at 25 6GB and around $1,200 for the Pro Max, assuming component prices behave between now and the fall.

Apple also might launch only its flagships in September, pushing the standard iPhone 18 to spring 2027 alongside a second-generation iPhone Air and a budget 18e. So the Pro and Pro Max could carry the entire fall spotlight on their own, which raises the stakes for getting the colors right.

My verdict for now

The iPhone 18 Pro Max feels like a refinement year rather than a reinvention, and the cherry finish might end up doing more for sales than the spec sheet. A variable-aperture camera and a 2 nm chip are welcome, yet the headline remains a color that manages to look grown-up and exciting at once. 3 months still separate us from the announcement, so treat every figure here as a moving target until Apple takes the stage. Me, I’m already mentally setting aside cash for the Dark Cherry.

Author

Grigor Baklajyan

Grigor Baklajyan is a copywriter covering technology at Gadget Flow. His contributions include product reviews, buying guides, how-to articles, and more.

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