If you’re dropping around ₹30,000 on a phone right now, you’re obviously not settling for something basic. You want a phone that looks sharp, lasts long, and has a camera that makes you go, “yeah, that’s nice.” Vivo’s new V60e kind of nails that brief.
The 200-megapixel main camera is the big show-off feature here, but it’s not the only thing this phone gets right.
The packaging is familiar Vivo stuff — clean box, neat layout. Inside, you get the usual set: the phone, a clear case, SIM pin, cable, quick start guide, and that chunky 90-watt charger. We tried the Noble Gold model, which has a nice glow to it — festive but not overdone. There’s also a Purple option for anyone who likes their phones a bit louder.
Weighing in at 190 grams, it's incredibly comfortable to hold and use, which is impressive considering the 6,500mAh battery packed into this chassis. The back panel is plastic, but the design doesn’t feel cheap.
Vivo also ditched the weird “bottle-opener” camera setup from last year’s V50e, going for a cleaner, V60-style module instead. The fingerprint scanner under the display is good, although it is a bit too low for my liking.
There’s a 6.77-inch AMOLED panel with 120Hz refresh rate support. It can go upto 1,600 nits, according to Vivo and outdoor visibility is genuinely solid. Colours aren’t oversaturated, which I actually like; it keeps Netflix shows and Reels looking natural instead of cartoonish.
The V60e runs on MediaTek’s Dimensity 7360 Turbo chip with LPDDR4X RAM and UFS 2.2 storage. In everyday use, it feels quick enough, opening apps, scrolling, streaming, all smooth.
I would say it’s not built for long gaming sessions, but casual gaming works fine and it doesn’t heat up easily.
The 6500mAh battery is a champ. Pair that with 90 W charging and you’re sorted. From zero to full in roughly an hour, just plug it in while you’re having breakfast and it’s ready before you leave.
The main part is the 200MP sensor with OIS, backed by an 8 MP ultra-wide and a 50MP front camera. If I talk about the image quality then in daylight the shots look detailed, and selfie quality during video calls is honestly great. Exposure is handled well, even in tricky lighting.
Vivo clearly knows what most buyers want — something that looks premium, lasts through the day, and takes solid photos. The V60e checks those boxes easily. It’s not trying to beat flagships at their own game, but for what it costs, it’s a balanced, good-looking phone that just works.