Honor 600 Launched in Nepal With 200MP Camera, Snapdragon 7 Gen 4 Chipset, 7,000mAh Battery & 120Hz AMOLED Display

Honor has finally brought the Honor 600 to Nepal, and it is a pretty exciting launch for anyone looking for a solid mid-range phone right now. You get a huge 7,000mAh battery, a 200MP camera, and an AMOLED screen that gets crazy bright. There’s a lot to cover, so let’s just jump right in.

⚡ Highlights:
  • Snapdragon 7 Gen 4 4nm processor, up to 12GB RAM
  • 6.57-inch 1.5K AMOLED, 120Hz, 8,000 nits peak brightness
  • 200MP main camera, 50MP selfie with 4K video
  • 7,000mAh battery, 80W wired, 27W reverse wired charging

Design and Display

Honor 600
Image Credit: Honor

Look, the Honor 600 design is going to turn some heads, mostly because it looks strikingly similar to the iPhone 17 Pro’s camera setup. That wide rectangular camera island on the back is pretty hard to miss. The frame is flat metal, it feels solid in the hand, and with IP68/IP69/IP69K certification, you don’t have to baby this phone around water or dust. Color options are Orange, Black, and Golden White, and it also has an SGS Drop-resistant cert, so accidental drops shouldn’t give you a heart attack either.

The display is a 6.57-inch 1.5K AMOLED screen with a 120Hz refresh rate. Peak brightness hits 8,000 nits, which is a serious jump from the 5,000 nits you got on the Honor 400. Outdoor visibility is going to be really good. It also has 3,840Hz PWM dimming and blue light filtering built in, so if you’re someone who scrolls late at night, your eyes will thank you.

Performance

Honor 600 Chipset
Image Credit: Honor

Powering the Honor 600 Nepal is the Snapdragon 7 Gen 4, built on a 4nm process. Day to day, this chip handles things smoothly whether you’re switching between apps, streaming, or playing casual games. You can get it with up to 12GB of RAM and up to 512GB of storage, so running out of space is not going to be a problem for most people. It runs MagicOS 10 on Android 16, and Honor is promising up to six major Android updates down the road, which is honestly pretty rare to see at this price point.

Now if raw speed is what you care about most, phones like the Poco X8 Pro Max do hit harder in that department at a similar price. Worth knowing before you decide.

Camera

Honor 600 Camera
Image Credit: Honor

Around the back you get two cameras. The main one is a 200MP shooter with a 1/1.4-inch sensor, f/1.9 aperture, and both OIS and EIS to keep your shots and videos steady. The second is a 12MP ultrawide with a 112-degree field of view. The missing piece here is a telephoto lens, and that does sting a bit when phones like the Nothing Phone 4a Pro and Vivo V70 offer one at a similar price. It is what it is.

That said, the AI camera stuff is genuinely interesting. The AI Image-to-Video 2.0 feature lets you take up to three photos, add a text prompt, and it turns them into an 8-second video clip, which is a fun upgrade over the previous version. There is also a Moving Photo Eraser that removes unwanted people or objects from your shots and videos. Night Mode has also been improved and now produces more realistic low-light photos without making the sky look fake or overexposed. Up front, the 50MP selfie camera does a solid job and can shoot 4K video for calls or content.

Battery and Connectivity

Honor 600 Battery
Image Credit: Honor

This is honestly where the Honor 600 stands out the most. The 7,000mAh battery is a big deal, up from 6,000mAh on the Honor 400, and realistically you are looking at two days of normal use on a single charge for a lot of people. When you do need to top it up, 80W wired charging gets it filled pretty fast. There is also 27W reverse wired charging, so you can use the phone to charge your earbuds or a friend’s device if needed.

Connectivity covers Wi-Fi 7, Bluetooth 5.4 with aptX Lossless and LHDC 5, NFC, 5G, eSIM, and an infrared blaster. The only real gripe here is that the USB-C port is USB 2.0, which is a bit behind for 2026, but most people will not notice it in daily use.

Honor 600 Specifications

  • Design & Build: 156 x 74.7 x 7.8 mm, 185g or 190g, Glass front, aluminum frame, IP68/IP69/IP69K dust tight and water resistant
  • Display: 6.57-inch AMOLED, 1264 x 2728 pixels, 120Hz refresh rate, 8000 nits (peak)
  • Processor: Qualcomm Snapdragon 7 Gen 4 (4nm), Adreno 722 GPU
  • Memory: 8GB/128GB, 8GB/256GB, 12GB/256GB, 8GB/512GB, 12GB/512GB
  • Rear Camera: 200MP, f/1.9, 24mm (wide), 1/1.4″, OIS + 12MP, f/2.2, 16mm, 112° (ultrawide), PDAF
  • Front Camera: 50MP, f/2.0, 21mm (wide), 1/2.88″, 4K@30fps video
  • Software & UI: Android 16, MagicOS 10, up to 6 major Android upgrades
  • Network & SIM: 5G, Nano-SIM, eSIM
  • Connectivity: Wi-Fi 7, Bluetooth 5.4, GPS + GLONASS + GALILEO + BDS + QZSS + NavIC, NFC, Infrared port, USB Type-C 2.0, OTG
  • Sensors: In-display optical fingerprint scanner, accelerometer, gyro, ultrasound proximity sensor, compass
  • Battery: 7000mAh, 80W wired, 27W reverse wired charging

Honor 600 Price and Availability in Nepal

The Honor 600 is now officially on sale in Nepal. The base 8GB plus 256GB version is priced at NPR 84,999, and the 12GB plus 256GB model will cost you NPR 89,999.

Honor 600 Price in Nepal (Official)
8GB/256GB NPR 84,999
12GB/256GB NPR 89,999

If you are among the first 600 buyers, you get a free Honor Choice Watch 2 Pro worth NPR 15,999, some added service protection, and a chance to win an Honor laptop. The phone can also be bought on a 0% EMI plan if you want to split the cost over time.

Conclusion

The Honor 600 is a well-rounded phone for the price in Nepal. The big battery, sharp AMOLED display, and 200MP main camera are the standout features, and getting six years of Android updates on a mid-range phone is something you don’t see every day. Yes, the no telephoto lens situation is annoying, and the chip is not going to win any speed contests, but for NPR 84,999 this phone covers pretty much everything most people need from a daily phone without asking too much from your wallet.

Be the first to know!

Follow Neptechie for instant tech updates.

Follow Now
Javed Ali
Javed Ali
He is the founder of Neptechie and a passionate tech writer covering smartphone reviews and tech news. A civil engineer by profession, his love for technology drives him to simplify complex tech topics for everyday users.

LEAVE A REPLY

Please enter your comment!
Please enter your name here

RELATED ARTICLES

RECENT POSTS