Honor 600 Pro review: At approximately $816 (originally HK$6,399), the Honor 600 Pro hides a 7,000mAh battery and a 200MP main sensor in a frame that feels unusually solid for the price, and we carried the phone on a full-day reporting assignment in Macau to see how it performs in the field.

The phone’s metal midframe measures 0.98mm at the border, the body is 7.8mm thick, and in the hand it never feels plasticky. According to Honor’s specifications, the aluminum frame and fit give the device a reassuring heft that masks the fact it packs a 7,000mAh battery inside.

The camera is the 600 Pro’s headline feature for photographers and content creators. Honor lists a 200MP main sensor with a 1/1.4-inch large sensor size, optical image stabilization, and a 7x optical zoom module. In a dark theater with bright stage lights, the phone preserved subject detail without turning backgrounds into flat black, and most images required only light editing.







Post production for photos and video

Beyond hardware, the Honor 600 Pro review must address editing and AI. The phone’s built-in video editor handled timeline edits, transitions, and soundtrack mixing without visible slowdowns, thanks to the Snapdragon 8 Elite processor, which Honor lists as the device’s chipset. On a ferry ride back from Macau I edited a highlight clip and posted it before docking.
AI image to video 2.0
The AI image-to-video 2.0 mode was the most surprising feature during our test. Pick one or two photos, type a short prompt, and the phone generates motion and cinematic atmosphere in a few minutes. I showed it to neighborhood kids and they called it magic. For content creators who share often, that instant storytelling tool is a clear advantage.
AI practicality for travel and meetings
The Honor 600 Pro review should also mention practical AI. The device supports real-time voice translation for two-way conversation, and Honor says it can translate phone calls, letting you make reservation calls or contact hotels with automated interpretation. In meetings, the built-in recorder converts speech to text and generates AI summaries, which saved time during post-meeting follow-up.

In low-light school auditorium shoots the phone impressed on the point that matters most: capturing the moment. Parents nearby asked what camera I was using because the photos were noticeably clearer. That practical result matters more than raw specs when you are trying to save memories.

At Honor’s listed price of approximately $816 (originally HK$6,399), phones that pair the same chipset with a comparable camera stack often cost two to three thousand Hong Kong dollars more. The Honor 600 Pro is not without compromises: AI face retouching can look plastic on some portraits, and the materials do not match the opulent finishes of some ultra-premium flagships. Still, the company appears to have prioritized battery, camera, and performance.
If you travel frequently, shoot and edit on the move, and want a phone that can last a day of heavy use without an external battery pack, the Honor 600 Pro delivers on that promise. For parents who want clear photos of fleeting moments, the camera is unlikely to disappoint. This Honor 600 Pro review reflects more than a week of real-world use and the phone’s published specifications.



