What the Vivo S60 Series Is and Why It Matters
The Vivo S60 series is a pair of midrange Vivo flagship phones designed to blur the line with premium devices by combining a 144Hz AMOLED display, a 7,200mAh battery and high-end chipsets with creator-focused cameras and AI-enhanced imaging tools. The standard Vivo S60 targets users who want near-flagship performance with Qualcomm’s Snapdragon 8s Gen 3, while the S60 Vitality Edition offers a more affordable entry with MediaTek’s Dimensity 7500 but keeps most of the same hardware strengths. Both phones share a 6.59-inch 1.5K AMOLED panel, 90W wired charging and a 50MP selfie camera with 4K recording. Their launch on June 3 signals Vivo’s aggressive timing in a crowded flagship market, where high refresh rate screens and very large batteries are becoming core differentiators.

144Hz AMOLED Display and Design: A Visual Advantage
One of the most striking Vivo S60 specs is the 6.59-inch 1.5K AMOLED display with a 144Hz refresh rate and 300Hz touch sampling, a figure that sits above many current premium rivals that still cap at 120Hz. The panel supports HDR, 100 percent DCI-P3 coverage, and 1.07 billion colors, aiming to give gamers and video enthusiasts smoother motion and more colorful visuals. According to My Mobile India, the S60 series includes IP68 and IP69 ratings, pairing visual upgrades with strong dust and water resistance. Both models use a cold-carved glass unibody with a metal frame, and Vivo highlights finishes like Early Summer Green, Midsummer Night’s Dream and the textured Starry Sea option. This combination of ultra-fast 144Hz AMOLED display and refined materials positions the S60 series as visually competitive with many established flagship brands.

Snapdragon 8s Gen 3 vs Dimensity 7500: Performance Choices
Under the hood, the series splits along chipset lines to hit different performance and price points. The Vivo S60 runs on Qualcomm’s 4nm Snapdragon 8s Gen 3 with a 3GHz prime core, four 2.8GHz performance cores and three 2GHz efficiency cores, paired with an Adreno 735 GPU and up to 16GB of RAM. This configuration targets users who want flagship-level responsiveness in gaming and multitasking. In contrast, the S60 Vitality Edition uses the 4nm MediaTek Dimensity 7500, with four performance cores up to 2.6GHz and four efficiency cores at 2GHz, plus an ARM Mali-G625 GPU and up to 12GB of RAM. While the Vitality Edition sacrifices some top-end power, it keeps key strengths such as the 144Hz AMOLED display, 7,200mAh battery and 90W charging, making it a performance-conscious yet cost-aware option.
Battery Life and Charging: 7,200mAh as a Flagship Statement
Battery capacity is where the S60 series pushes hardest against flagship competition. Both models carry a 7,200mAh battery, a figure that exceeds many premium phones that often stay closer to 5,000mAh. This capacity, combined with 90W wired fast charging over USB-C, is intended to support heavy all-day use, from gaming to continuous video capture. Gizmochina notes that both phones add stereo speakers, X-axis linear motors and infrared remote functionality, emphasizing all-round usability rather than chasing thinness at the expense of endurance. At around 207g for the S60 and 199g for the Vitality Edition, Vivo balances the large 7,200mAh battery with reasonable weight and a slim 7.92mm profile on the standard model. For users who prioritize reliable battery life over minimal thickness, this power profile is a strong selling point.
Cameras, Live Imaging Tools and the Vitality Edition’s Role
Camera hardware and software are central to Vivo’s positioning. The S60’s rear triple setup includes a 50MP main camera with OIS, 8MP ultrawide and 50MP periscope telephoto with up to 100x digital zoom, while both models share a 50MP front camera capable of 4K recording. Gizmochina highlights new Live imaging features such as 4K Live capture, Cool White Portrait mode, Starlight Live effects and 3D Spatial Visual Effects that turn Live Photos into glasses-free 3D-like images via motion. The S60 Vitality Edition drops the 50MP periscope telephoto but retains the 50MP main and 8MP ultrawide, focusing on core focal lengths while trimming cost. Running Android 16 with OriginOS 6, both phones bundle these tools into a cohesive creator package, making the S60 series appealing to users who shoot a lot of video, vlogs and social content.
