Design: An Unapologetically iPhone-Style Premium Android Phone
The Honor 600 Pro makes no secret of where its design inspiration comes from. Flat sides, a familiar camera island, polished animations and ultra-slim bezels give this premium Android phone a distinctly iPhone-like vibe the moment you pick it up. Honor’s self-developed Skyline packaging technology enables a 0.98mm ultra-narrow, equal-width frame on all four sides of the display, helping content feel immersive without distracting edges. On the back, the 3D Starry Galaxy aesthetic with diamond-shaped textures and twin-ring camera decoration feels ornate rather than generic, and has already been hailed by fans as one of Honor’s most attractive designs to date. In the hand, the phone feels dense and expensive, easily matching other top-tier flagships. If you like Apple’s clean lines but prefer Android freedom, the Honor 600 Pro delivers that crossover look without feeling like a cheap imitation.

Battery Life and Charging: The Standout Flagship Phone Battery Life
Battery life is where the Honor 600 Pro stops chasing trends and starts defining its own priorities. With a huge 8000mAh cell in the main release and a slightly smaller but still massive 6400mAh pack in other markets, this device is built to outlast almost anything in its class. Heavy users report comfortably stretching to two days between charges, even with constant camera use, streaming, social media and hotspotting. When you finally do run it dry, 80W wired charging and 50W wireless charging slash downtime dramatically, reducing battery anxiety to an afterthought. While some rivals may edge it in pure charging wattage, the real-world difference is minimal. Paired with efficient hardware and software tuning, the Honor 600 Pro sets a new benchmark for flagship phone battery life, prioritising endurance and practicality over thinness-at-all-costs or gimmicky fast-charging claims.

Display, Performance and Software: Flagship Power with a Quirky Personality
The Honor 600 Pro backs its premium positioning with equally high-end core specs. A 6.57-inch high-refresh-rate straight display delivers sharp visuals, smooth 120Hz scrolling and enough brightness to stay legible in harsh light, reinforcing the premium feel already signalled by its ultra-thin bezels. Under the hood, Qualcomm’s Snapdragon 8 Elite chipset keeps pace with other top-tier devices: apps open instantly, multitasking feels effortless, and demanding games run smoothly without obvious stutter. Software, however, is more divisive. MagicOS has matured into a fast, generally stable interface, but it still suffers from bloatware and an identity crisis, sometimes feeling like it is play-acting as iOS. Some users will appreciate the familiar visual language, while others may dislike the clutter and mixed design cues. The result is flagship-grade performance wrapped in a software experience that works well, but does not yet feel perfectly coherent.
Cameras and Creator Features: Versatile, Fun, and Geared Toward Everyday Use
Camera hardware on the Honor 600 Pro is ambitious and thoughtfully tuned for practical use. A 200MP ultra-clear main sensor with CIPA 6.0-level stabilisation anchors the triple-camera array, joined by a genuinely useful 50MP telephoto and a 12MP ultra-wide. In practice, it produces detailed, vibrant photos with strong dynamic range, while portraits in particular stand out. Although some rivals still offer more consistent point-and-shoot results, this system is firmly in flagship territory. For creators and students, Honor pushes hard on video and live-streaming: 4K Live capture, lossless 4K editing and sharing, and industry-first 7x 4K Live zoom make it easy to document events without sacrificing quality. Novel touches like Doppelganger Live, puzzle-style layouts and an electronic magnetic secondary screen for remote shooting add playful flexibility. These features focus less on spec-sheet buzzwords and more on making everyday content creation simpler and more enjoyable.
Price and Value: Does the Honor 600 Pro Earn Its Flagship Tag?
Honor clearly positions the 600 Pro as a true flagship, and its pricing reflects that ambition. The line-up starts at 3,899 yuan for the 12GB + 256GB variant, rising to 4,299 yuan for 12GB + 512GB and 4,699 yuan for 16GB + 512GB. Elsewhere, its launch tag of £899.99 places it firmly among high-end alternatives from more established flagship brands. The question, then, is whether its Apple-inspired styling and huge battery deliver enough substance for the money. On balance, the answer is yes for users who value endurance, performance and premium hardware feel above software polish or camera perfection. The Honor 600 Pro may not have the most refined interface or the single best camera, but it nails daily fundamentals—battery life, charging speed, display quality and responsiveness—while offering a distinctive design. For many, that combination will justify the flagship price.
