Electrochemical (de)intercalation is a delicate method to precisely control the alkaline ion composition in alkaline transition metal oxides. Because of complicated interactions, metal charge ordering patterns can form spontaneously at special fractional alkaline compositions and orderings. Here, we show that this elegant electrochemical process can create dynamically preferred structures in an anharmonic energy landscape that conventional syntheses and computations can rarely visit. Specifically, electrochemically prepared Na1/2MnO2ordering exhibits abnormal structure distortions, charge orderings, and dynamical activities. Strong magnetic fluctuations and lattice dynamics are observed in an unusually wide temperature range in Na1/2MnO2, which distinguishes it from all other NaxMnO2at higher or lower Na compositions. The results emphasize the unique opportunity of using electrochemical processes to design and create novel quantum states with strongly coupled and mutually enhanced electronic and lattice fluctuations, likely through a special dynamic charge flux functional, as suggested by our computational investigations.