From China-Only Line to Global Mid-Range Contenders
After the previous 500 series skipped international shelves, the new Honor 600 lineup marks a clear return to the global mid-range stage. The standard Honor 600 is positioned firmly in the mid-range, while the Honor 600 Pro pushes into sub‑flagship or “flagship killer” territory with upgraded silicon and cameras. Both phones share some eye-catching hardware that will interest spec‑hunters comparing mid-range options. The Honor 600 specs include a 6.57‑inch AMOLED panel with a 120Hz refresh rate and extremely high peak brightness, plus a large battery and fast wired charging. The 600 Pro largely mirrors this feature set but layers on more powerful processing and an extra telephoto camera. Together, the two models signal Honor’s renewed focus on competing aggressively in the mainstream price bands instead of leaning solely on its premium Magic series.
Honor 600 Design: Global vs China-Only Variants
One of the most noticeable differences in the Honor 600 design is how the global and Chinese editions are styled around the camera island. Global models use a more conventional rectangular module, while the China-bound versions adopt a pill-shaped horizontal bar that stretches across the back, immediately setting them apart visually. Honor has also confirmed a wide range of color options for the Chinese lineup, including Lucky Star, Obsidian Black, Light Feather Blue and Green Apple, with the Lucky Star finish featuring a distinctive rear pattern. The standard Honor 600 carries a dual rear camera configuration globally, built around a 200MP main sensor and a 12MP ultra‑wide, while the Honor 600 Pro adds a third camera, a 50MP telephoto, to its triple array. This split approach lets Honor court both style-conscious buyers and camera enthusiasts without losing a cohesive design language.

Honor 600 Specs: Display, Performance and Battery
On paper, the Honor 600 specs are unusually strong for a mid-range device. It features a 6.57‑inch AMOLED display with 120Hz refresh rate, HDR Vivid support and up to 8,000 nits peak brightness, making outdoor visibility and smooth scrolling standout strengths. Under the hood, the phone runs Qualcomm’s Snapdragon 7 Gen 4 chipset, paired with memory options up to 12GB of RAM and 512GB of storage depending on market. The camera setup combines a 200MP optically stabilized main sensor, a 12MP ultra‑wide camera and a 50MP selfie shooter, all capable of 4K video with stabilization. Battery capacity varies slightly by region, with global units going up to 7,000mAh and some markets getting a 6,400mAh pack, but all benefit from 80W wired charging and 27W reverse wired support. IP68/IP69K protection, stereo speakers, eSIM, Wi‑Fi 7 and NFC round out a very complete mid-range package.
Honor 600 Pro: Extra Power and Camera Flexibility
The Honor 600 Pro builds on the standard model with more powerful internals and a richer camera setup. While both phones carry 12GB of RAM in their baseline international configurations, the 600 Pro steps up to a Snapdragon 8 Elite chipset in at least one major market, and some Chinese variants are tipped to use a Dimensity 8550 Elite SoC instead. Storage is doubled to 512GB on the leaked global Pro configuration. The 6.57‑inch AMOLED display, 120Hz refresh rate and 7,000mAh battery are shared with the vanilla model, as is the headline 200MP main camera and 12MP ultra‑wide. Where the Pro pulls ahead is the additional 50MP telephoto camera, promising better zoom performance and more flexibility for portrait and travel photography. For buyers weighing Honor 600 vs 600 Pro, the decision will largely hinge on whether the extra performance and telephoto lens justify the premium.

Honor 600 Launch and Early Pricing Signals
Honor has already confirmed a May 25 on-sale date for the 600 series in its home market, complete with detailed storage and color options, even as global launches roll out through carriers and retailers. For international buyers watching the Honor 600 launch, early listings have also spilled approximate pricing, with one major market showing the Honor 600 at R15,000 and the Honor 600 Pro at R20,000. At those levels, Honor is clearly aiming above budget territory and betting that its huge batteries, bright displays, robust IP69K protection and high‑resolution cameras will convince shoppers to stretch their budgets. The presence of multiple configurations – up to 16GB/512GB on the Pro in some regions – further underlines Honor’s ambition to scale the 600 series across several mid-range tiers. If the company can maintain aggressive street pricing, the 600 and 600 Pro could significantly boost its share in the crowded mid-range segment.

