Vivo’s next Y-series phone is shaping up to be a battery-first device, and that is exactly the point. The company has teased the Vivo Y600 Pro ahead of launch, while a separate leak fills in the missing pieces: a 10,200mAh battery, a 6.83-inch OLED LTPS display, and MediaTek’s Dimensity 7300e chipset with 1.5K resolution.
That combination puts the Vivo Y600 Pro squarely in the growing club of mid-range handsets trying to win on endurance rather than glamour. Big batteries have become a selling point across Chinese brands over the past year, and Vivo appears to be betting that buyers will happily trade thinness for fewer charging-anxiety attacks.
Vivo Y600 Pro specifications
According to the leak, the Y600 Pro will use a flat 6.83-inch OLED LTPS panel with 1.5K resolution. The chipset is said to run at 2.5GHz, and the headline number is the 10,200mAh battery, which would place it among the largest-capacity phones in its class.
- Display: 6.83-inch flat OLED LTPS
- Resolution: 1.5K
- Chipset: MediaTek Dimensity 7300e at 2.5GHz
- Battery: 10,200mAh
- Main camera: 50-megapixel
Vivo has already confirmed a 50-megapixel primary camera in its teaser. The rest of the rear setup is not official, but the phone’s battery-heavy positioning makes a basic secondary sensor a sensible guess rather than a creative one. Separate reports also point to 90W fast charging, which would be the part that keeps a battery this large from turning into a daily waiting game.
How Vivo is positioning the Y600 Pro
The Y600 Pro is expected to arrive by the end of this month, and it will not be alone in chasing battery bragging rights. The report says it will run into the Redmi Note 17 series and the Honor X80 lineup, both of which are also expected to lean on high-capacity batteries. Vivo’s own iQOO brand is reportedly building a similar phone too, which suggests this is less a one-off experiment and more a race to see who can make endurance feel premium.
If the leak is accurate, Vivo is not trying to make the thinnest phone in the room. It is trying to make the one that lasts longest, charges fast, and still looks respectable enough to avoid the ”brick” label. In a market where mid-range specs have started to blur, that is a cleaner pitch than pretending every phone needs to be a camera monster.

