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Description
Design, build: 163.70×76.20×7.59 mm, 200 gm, IP68/IP69 rated
Display: 6.83-inch AMOLED, 1.5K (1260×2800), 120Hz, 1900 nits peak, HDR10+
Chipset: MediaTek Dimensity 7360 Turbo (4nm)
Memory: 8/12GB RAM, 256GB storage (non-expandable)
Software & UI: OriginOS 6 on top of Android 16
Rear Camera: Dual (200MP main, 8MP ultrawide)
Front Camera: 32MP (hole-punch)
Security: Fingerprint sensor (Optical in-display)
Connectivity: Dual-SIM (Nano), WiFi 6 (dual-band), Bluetooth 5.4, USB-C, 4G LTE, 5G
Battery: 7000mAh with 90W charging (power adapter provided)
Let’s start with the design, the new V70 FE has a very slim design for a phone that carries such a massive battery. It has reasonable heft, but the company has shipped the phone with plastic on both sides and the back. Moving on, the phone handles everything from submersion to high-pressure water jets, as it is rated for an IP68 and IP69 rating.

On the display side, it comes with a huge 6.83-inch 1.5K AMOLED display that delivers sharp, vibrant visuals, making scrolling more enjoyable. The panel also supports a fast 120Hz refresh rate and 1900-nit peak brightness, which means outdoor readability shouldn't be a problem, even in direct sunlight. Other than that, watching Netflix or YouTube should also be no problem, as both support HDR10+.
The device runs on Dimensity 7360 Turbo, which is a 4nm node that should handle all the normal tasks like social media and moderate gaming at ease. But since it's a mid-range chip, you cannot push it beyond what it can do, i.e., playing games at the highest possible setting. A lot of smartphones, in the mid-range section, in recent months have been shipping with 12GB of LPDDR5 RAM, and following that, Vivo has also shipped memory up to 12GB of LPDDR5 RAM here. And for storage, there is a 256GB UFS 3.1 option.

On the software side, you get Android 16 with OriginOS 6 running on top, and Vivo is also promising four years of OS updates and six years of security patches.
Moving on, you get a 200MP Samsung main sensor with OIS that should capture detailed, well-stabilized shots that hold up even when you crop aggressively, and there’s also AI SuperZoom up to 30x. In good light, the results should be good with natural colors and solid dynamic range.

The 8MP ultrawide is the weakest thing about this camera system. Because anything less than ideal light will remind you immediately that it's a budget sensor attached to a premium-priced phone. There is also no telephoto, which is quite a bummer for the price. On the front, we get a 32MP selfie camera that delivers decent selfies and remains reliable throughout the day.
The phone comes with a large 7000 mAh silicon-carbon battery. Vivo claims the phone offers 43+ hours of YouTube playback. The battery then gets its juice from a 90W FlashCharge, which goes from 0 to 100% in just 60 minutes.
Let’s start with the design, the new V70 FE has a very slim design for a phone that carries such a massive battery. It has reasonable heft, but the company has shipped the phone with plastic on both sides and the back. Moving on, the phone handles everything from submersion to high-pressure water jets, as it is rated for an IP68 and IP69 rating.

On the display side, it comes with a huge 6.83-inch 1.5K AMOLED display that delivers sharp, vibrant visuals, making scrolling more enjoyable. The panel also supports a fast 120Hz refresh rate and 1900-nit peak brightness, which means outdoor readability shouldn't be a problem, even in direct sunlight. Other than that, watching Netflix or YouTube should also be no problem, as both support HDR10+.
The device runs on Dimensity 7360 Turbo, which is a 4nm node that should handle all the normal tasks like social media and moderate gaming at ease. But since it's a mid-range chip, you cannot push it beyond what it can do, i.e., playing games at the highest possible setting. A lot of smartphones, in the mid-range section, in recent months have been shipping with 12GB of LPDDR5 RAM, and following that, Vivo has also shipped memory up to 12GB of LPDDR5 RAM here. And for storage, there is a 256GB UFS 3.1 option.

On the software side, you get Android 16 with OriginOS 6 running on top, and Vivo is also promising four years of OS updates and six years of security patches.
Moving on, you get a 200MP Samsung main sensor with OIS that should capture detailed, well-stabilized shots that hold up even when you crop aggressively, and there’s also AI SuperZoom up to 30x. In good light, the results should be good with natural colors and solid dynamic range.

The 8MP ultrawide is the weakest thing about this camera system. Because anything less than ideal light will remind you immediately that it's a budget sensor attached to a premium-priced phone. There is also no telephoto, which is quite a bummer for the price. On the front, we get a 32MP selfie camera that delivers decent selfies and remains reliable throughout the day.
The phone comes with a large 7000 mAh silicon-carbon battery. Vivo claims the phone offers 43+ hours of YouTube playback. The battery then gets its juice from a 90W FlashCharge, which goes from 0 to 100% in just 60 minutes.