Honor has quietly added a cheaper sibling to its 600 lineup: the Honor 600e, launched in Peru with a familiar design, a big AMOLED display, a 108MP main camera, and a price that aims to undercut the 600 and 600 Pro without looking too stripped down. The Honor 600e is now on sale in Peru, and its biggest selling points are a 6.6-inch AMOLED screen, a 108MP camera, and a 6,520mAh battery.

What stands out most is how much screen and battery Honor kept intact. The company is still selling a 6.6-inch AMOLED panel with a 120Hz refresh rate, 1200 x 2600 resolution, 6,500 nits peak brightness, and 3840Hz PWM dimming, plus a 6,520mAh battery with 45W wired charging and reverse wired charging. That is a fairly aggressive spec sheet for a phone positioned below the better-known models, and it shows how display and battery numbers have become the easiest way for brands to look premium without paying flagship silicon prices.

Honor 600e specs and features

  • MediaTek Dimensity 7100 chipset
  • 8GB RAM and 512GB storage
  • 108MP main camera with f/1.75 aperture
  • 5MP ultrawide camera
  • 16MP front camera
  • 6,520mAh battery with 45W wired charging
  • MagicOS 10 based on Android 16

Inside, the 600e uses MediaTek’s Dimensity 7100, paired with 8GB of RAM and 512GB of storage in the version currently listed. Around the back, the setup is straightforward: a 108MP main sensor, a 5MP ultrawide camera and, up front, a 16MP selfie shooter. It also keeps IP66 dust and water resistance, NFC, stereo speakers with what Honor calls ”300% stereo sound volume,” and an extra hardware button borrowed from its pricier stablemates.

Honor 600e price in Peru

The only listed configuration costs PEN 1,999, which works out to roughly €505, and comes in Velvet Gray, Desert Gold, and Vital Green. That price puts the 600e in an awkward-but-interesting spot: expensive for a midrange phone, yet still below the sort of hardware Honor is trying to imitate. If the rest of the 600 series follows the usual pattern, this is the model intended to widen the lineup rather than headline it.

A familiar formula with fewer compromises

Honor is leaning on a strategy plenty of rivals use too: preserve the flashy bits people notice in a store, then trim the chipset and camera array enough to keep margins sane. Samsung, Xiaomi, and others have spent years turning that formula into an art form, and the 600e fits the playbook neatly. The real question is whether buyers want the screen, battery, and software polish enough to forgive the less exciting internals.

Source: Gizmochina

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