Vivo is lining up the Y600 Turbo for a May 25 debut, and the spec sheet reads like a direct challenge to anyone still pretending mid-range phones have to be boring. The headline features are a 6.83-inch OLED display with 1.5K resolution and a 165 Hz refresh rate, a Dimensity 8500 chip, and a battery that could reach 9020 mAh – the kind of number that makes many flagships look a little underfed.
If the leaks are accurate, the Vivo Y600 Turbo also brings LPDDR5x memory, UFS 3.1 storage, and 90 W fast charging. That combination points to a performance-first device rather than a camera-first one, which is exactly where a lot of buyers have been drifting: big batteries, fast panels, and enough horsepower to keep gaming and scrolling smooth without turning the handset into a pocket heater.
Vivo Y600 Turbo display and hardware
The 165 Hz panel is the eye-catching bit, because Vivo has apparently never pushed its Y-series this far before. Paired with the Dimensity 8500, it suggests the company is trying to blur the line between a mainstream phone and a lightweight gaming machine, which is a smart play in a market where smoother screens sell specs almost by themselves.
- 6.83-inch OLED display
- 1.5K resolution
- 165 Hz refresh rate
- Dimensity 8500 chipset
- LPDDR5x RAM
- UFS 3.1 storage
Vivo Y600 Turbo battery and 90 W charging
The battery is the real swagger move. Around 9020 mAh is far beyond the usual daily-driver formula, and it arrives with 90 W charging to stop the phone from becoming a glorified brick after a long day. If Vivo nails the efficiency, this could be one of those devices that quietly wins on endurance while louder rivals argue about benchmark charts.
That kind of endurance push is no accident. Phone makers have spent the last few cycles leaning harder into silicon efficiency and larger batteries, because buyers have made their preference painfully clear: they would rather charge less often than carry a prettier excuse for 7 p.m. battery anxiety.
Sony camera, Android 16, and colors
On the imaging side, Vivo is said to use a 50 MP Sony LYT-600 main camera, backed by an auxiliary module, plus a 16 MP front camera. The software package is also current: Android 16 with OriginOS 6. The phone is expected in white and pink, which is a pleasant reminder that not every specs-heavy handset has to dress like a stealth missile.
The open question is how much of this hardware stack lands in an affordable package, because that will decide whether the Y600 Turbo becomes a sleeper hit or just another overbuilt promo sheet. Still, with a launch set for May 25 and a battery-screen combination this aggressive, Vivo is clearly aiming straight at the users who want speed, stamina, and no excuses.

