Four-Model Honor 600 Lineup: From Vitality to 600e
Honor’s 600 family has evolved into a four-pronged lineup aimed at different budgets and performance needs. At the core sit the Honor 600 Vitality Edition, 600 Super Edition and 600 Pro, all sharing a 6.57‑inch 1.5K OLED display with 120Hz refresh rate and MagicOS 10 based on Android 16. Above them in battery size sits the custom domestic Honor 600 with its upgraded power pack, while the Honor 600e targets entry-level users with a smaller OLED panel and AI-centric hardware. Across the range, Honor is clearly leaning on OLED display phones and large batteries as key differentiators, while reserving the most advanced camera arrays and connectivity for the Pro and Super models. The result is an unusually broad family: one branding umbrella, but four very different propositions in design, performance, imaging and endurance.
Battery Showdown: Up to 8600mAh and Fast Charging
Battery capacity is where the Honor 600 series specs diverge most dramatically. The Honor 600 Vitality uses a 7,000mAh Qinghai Lake battery with 80W fast charging and 27W wired reverse charging, positioning it as a long-lasting mid-range option. The 600 Super pushes even further with an 8,600mAh pack, making it one of the most prominent 8600mAh battery phone examples in the current market. The custom domestic Honor 600 likewise features an 8,600mAh cell, while the domestic 600 Pro drops slightly to 8,000mAh but adds 50W wireless charging on top of 80W wired and 27W reverse charging. These high-capacity designs contrast with the globally launched variants, which cap their batteries lower. By comparison, the budget Honor 600e prioritises efficient AI workflows and comfortable viewing over sheer capacity, underscoring Honor’s tiered battery strategy.
Camera Tiers: From 50MP Mid-Range to 200MP Flagship Zoom
Imaging is another major separator between the four Honor 600 models. The Honor 600 Vitality sits at the entry point with a 50MP main camera with OIS and a 12MP ultra-wide lens, plus a 50MP selfie camera. Move up to the Honor 600 Super and you get a 200MP camera smartphone: a 200MP primary sensor with OIS and a 12MP ultra-wide macro camera, again backed by a 50MP front camera. The Honor 600 Pro keeps the 200MP main shooter and 12MP ultra-wide macro, but adds a 50MP telephoto camera using Sony’s IMX856 sensor with OIS, creating the most versatile zoom setup in the family. The domestic 600 and 600 Pro mirror this 200MP‑centred hardware, while the 600e scales back its rear camera configuration to fit its budget positioning and AI‑focused design.

Chipsets, Software and Pricing Across the Range
Honor splits the 600 series along chipset lines to align performance with pricing. The Honor 600 Vitality and 600 Super rely on Qualcomm’s Snapdragon 7 Gen 4, targeting efficient upper‑mid‑range performance. The Honor 600 Pro, including its domestic edition, switches to MediaTek’s Dimensity 8550 Elite paired with Honor Phantom Engine 3.0, aiming at smoother gaming and multitasking. All three share MagicOS 10 on top of Android 16, bringing common software features despite their hardware differences. Connectivity is consistently modern, with Wi‑Fi 6, NFC, IR blasters and stereo speakers across most variants, and higher‑end fingerprint tech reserved for the Pro and Super. Pricing scales with capability: Honor 600 Vitality starts at CNY 2,699, while the domestic Honor 600 and 600 Pro climb higher. Separately, the Honor 600e uses a Dimensity 7100 chipset with a dedicated AI processing block to differentiate itself in the entry segment.
