Highlights

  • Eye-catching design with UV-reactive back panel
  • Massive 7000mAh battery with 90W fast charging
  • Sharp 1.5K AMOLED display with 120Hz refresh rate
  • Reliable 200MP main camera with natural colours

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Vivo V70 FE Review: Style Meets Serious Battery Power

Vivo V70 FE delivers a striking design, massive 7000mAh battery, and smooth everyday performance in a well-balanced mid-range package.

Vivo V70 FE Review: Style Meets Serious Battery Power
Key Specifications
Price : ₹37,999
6.83", 1.5K 120Hz AMOLED, 1900 nits HBM Mediatek Dimensity 7360 Turbo Up to 12GB LPDDR5 RAM + 256 UFS 3.1
200MP Main + 8MP UW 50MP Selfie 7000mAh + 90W
Our Review
8.5 / 10
Design9/10
Display8.5/10
Performance7.5/10
Camera8.5/10
Software8/10
Battery life8.5/10
Pros
  • Stunning and unique design
  • Excellent battery life
  • Bright and sharp AMOLED display
  • Stable gaming performance
  • Clean and polished software
Cons
  • Ultrawide struggles in low light
  • Benchmark scores feel underwhelming
  • No Dolby Vision support
  • 4K video limited to 30fps

Vivo’s V series has always chased one goal, offer camera performance that feels a tier above its price. The V60e managed that fairly well, but beyond the cameras, it kept things predictable with its display and battery.

The V70 FE heads in a new direction. FE does not mean Fan Edition this time. Vivo calls it Fashion Edition, and it is more than a label swap. It reflects a clear change in how the phone is positioned.

This shift shows up quickly. You get a larger display, a much bigger battery, and a design that feels far more assured than before.

There are upgrades on the software side too. OriginOS 6 based on Android 16 comes out of the box, along with a more useful set of AI features. On paper, this feels like a proper step forward, and in day-to-day use, it largely holds up.

Vivo V70 FE Design: Does it actually feel like a Fashion Edition?

With the V70 FE, I can see Vivo trying to rewrite what “FE” usually stands for. Instead of the usual Fan Edition route, this is being pitched as a Fashion Edition, and once I started using it, that shift felt pretty intentional.

The first thing that stood out to me was just how eye-catching this phone is. The Northern Lights Purple variant I have been using does not try to play it safe at all. It looks bold, has a distinct personality, and more importantly, it feels more premium than what I expected at this price.

What I really liked is how the back panel behaves under light. There is a layered gradient here with a subtle pattern sitting underneath, and depending on how you tilt it, the finish keeps evolving. It feels dynamic without crossing into flashy territory.

Then there is the UV-reactive element. When I took it out in sunlight, the hidden glow pattern on the back actually showed up, which is a neat touch. It is not something that changes how you use the phone, but it adds a bit of character that most phones in this segment simply do not bother with.

In hand, the material choice surprised me. Even though this is a plastic composite back, it does not feel cheap or hollow. The build feels tight, the finish is clean, and overall, it comes across as a well put-together device. If the purple feels a bit too loud, there is a blue option as well, but personally, I would still pick the purple for how different it looks.

What genuinely caught me off guard, though, is how slim and balanced this phone feels. At 7.69mm and 202 grams, I did not expect it to house a 7000mAh battery this comfortably. There is no awkward weight distribution or bulk, which is something I usually notice on phones with batteries this big. Vivo has handled that balance really well here.

I also spent some time looking at the camera module, and while the vertical pill-shaped layout is familiar, the detailing makes a difference. The metallic rings around the lenses and the Aura Light sitting next to them give it a more refined, finished look.

This is not just about looks either. With IP68 and IP69 ratings, I feel confident taking this phone into less-than-ideal conditions without worrying too much.

As for the basics, everything is where you would expect it to be. At the bottom, I get a USB-C port with USB 2.0 speeds, a dual SIM tray, a mic, and a speaker. The top houses a second speaker, another mic, and an IR blaster. NFC is here as well, along with the usual Wi-Fi and Bluetooth support.

The V70 FE nails what it set out to do with its design. It stands out, feels premium in hand, and does enough differently to actually justify that Fashion Edition tag.

Vivo V70 FE’s Display & Speakers: More than just a big panel

The display quickly became one of my favourite parts of using the V70 FE. Vivo has gone with a 6.83-inch 1.5K AMOLED panel with a 120Hz refresh rate, and that extra bit of screen size over the V70 and V70 Elite is immediately noticeable in daily use.

What I appreciate is how clean the front looks. The bezels are slim and even all around, so there is no distracting chin or uneven framing. It feels properly modern the moment you unlock it.

In terms of sharpness, this panel holds its ground. At 449ppi, text looks crisp regardless of size, and images retain their detail nicely. I never ran into moments where things looked soft or slightly blurred, even when I was looking closely.

Colour reproduction is another strong point. With P3 wide colour gamut support, visuals come across balanced and accurate rather than overly saturated. Photos and videos have a sense of depth to them, which I personally prefer over punchy but unrealistic colours.

Vivo mentions support for over a billion colours, which likely means either a true 10-bit panel or an 8-bit plus FRC setup. The brand has not clarified this, but in everyday use, I did not notice any banding or inconsistencies that would raise concerns.

Brightness is where this display really proves itself. With HBM going up to 1900 nits, I had no issues using the phone outdoors, even under harsh sunlight. It stays readable without needing to hunt for shade.

HDR10+ support is present and works well across platforms like YouTube and Netflix. Dolby Vision is not here, but honestly, I did not find myself missing it. HDR10+ covers most content well enough that it never felt like a limitation.

The in-display optical fingerprint sensor has also been reliable for me. It is quick to unlock and consistent over time, which is not always a given in this segment.

On the audio side, the dual stereo speakers do a solid job. They get loud enough to fill a small room without distorting, and the tuning favours clarity. Dialogue stands out clearly, which makes watching videos or shows without earphones a comfortable experience.

Vivo V70 FE’s Cameras: The 200MP sensor does all the work

Vivo’s V series has always leaned heavily on cameras, and with the V70 FE, I can see that same intent carry forward. The idea remains simple: deliver strong imaging at a price that feels accessible.

The setup itself is fairly straightforward. I get a 200MP main camera with OIS, paired with an 8MP ultrawide. The main sensor is the 1/1.56-inch Samsung HP5, backed by Vivo’s own stabilisation system. Up front, there is a 50MP selfie camera with autofocus.

There is no Zeiss branding this time, but in use, I did not feel like the experience was lacking. Vivo’s colour tuning still feels familiar, especially on the main camera, which ends up doing most of the heavy lifting.

In daylight, I found the main camera to be consistently reliable. Images come out sharp with plenty of detail, but what stood out to me is how balanced the colours look. Vivo avoids pushing saturation too far, so skies appear natural and highlights stay under control. Dynamic range is strong, and even when I cropped into shots, the detail held up well without looking artificial.

Portraits are another strong area. The processing is clearly software-driven, but edge detection is mostly accurate, and the background blur has a natural falloff. The results look clean and pleasing more often than not.

Low-light performance has also been dependable in my use. The main sensor keeps noise in check while maintaining decent sharpness. Colours remain consistent, and images come out bright enough without looking overprocessed. It may not lead in extreme scenarios, but for this segment, it does a solid job.

I also like Vivo’s Aura Light. It acts more like a soft fill light rather than a harsh flash, which helps add depth to portraits without flattening the subject.

The 8MP ultrawide is where compromises start to show. In good lighting, it delivers usable detail and keeps colours fairly close to the main sensor. In low light, though, the drop in resolution becomes noticeable, especially in finer textures.

Selfies are pretty solid too, mainly because the front camera gets autofocus, and Vivo’s eye-focus system does a good job of keeping subjects sharp.

For video, the phone supports 4K at 30fps, with 60fps limited to 1080p on both front and rear cameras. Stabilisation has been steady in my testing, thanks to OIS and EIS working together.

Overall, this is a dependable camera setup that delivers where it matters.

Vivo V70 FE’s Performance: Numbers only tell half the story

On paper, the V70 FE looks well-equipped to handle performance. In reality, though, the numbers and the experience do not quite tell the same story.

I am getting the 4nm Dimensity 7360 Turbo here, paired with LPDDR5 RAM and UFS 3.1 storage. It sounds like a strong combination, but the benchmarks do not fully back that up.

In AnTuTu, the score capped out at around 984,000, just missing the million mark. Geekbench returned 3065 in multi-core and 1030 in single-core. The 3DMark Wild Life Stress Test showed 99% stability, which looks impressive, but neither the peak nor the lowest loop crossed 1000.

That said, once I moved away from benchmarks, the experience felt very different. In everyday use, the phone has been consistently smooth. Apps load quickly, multitasking feels effortless, and general navigation stays fluid without any noticeable slowdowns.

Gaming has also held up well in my testing. I played BGMI at close to 90FPS, and it remained stable even during longer sessions. What stood out to me more was the thermals. The phone stayed cool, with no obvious signs of throttling.

That stability comes down to the cooling setup. Vivo has included a large vapour chamber along with multiple temperature sensors that actively manage heat under load.

So while the benchmark numbers may not look exceptional, my actual experience has been smooth and reliable, which matters far more in daily use.

Vivo V70 FE’s Software: OriginOS 6 is a highlight

If you have used a recent Vivo phone, the software here will feel instantly familiar. The V70 FE runs OriginOS 6 based on Android 16 right out of the box, and in my experience, this continues to be one of the better Android skins around right now.

What I like is how well it scales across devices. Whether it is a budget phone or a flagship, OriginOS 6 tends to feel polished, and on the V70 FE, that consistency holds up. The UI feels responsive, clean, and easy to get used to.

There are some obvious design inspirations here. The interface leans into glass-like visuals and animations that feel similar to what Apple has been doing. But at the same time, it does not feel like a copy. Vivo has built enough of its own identity into the experience.

A good example of that is Origin Island. It works along similar lines to Apple’s Dynamic Island when it comes to notifications, but I found it going a bit further in terms of functionality. It handles alerts in a more flexible way, and honestly, there are a few ideas here that even Apple could take notes from.

Customisation is another area where Vivo has put in effort. I get options like Flip Cards on the lock screen, more layout flexibility, and additional styling tools that let you tweak the look without making things complicated. Even the setup process feels simpler and more guided.

What stood out to me most is how consistent everything feels in daily use. Animations are smooth, app launches are quick, and smaller interactions like switching apps or pulling down notifications feel fluid. I did not run into any stutters or awkward transitions during my time with the phone.

The redesigned control centre also helps here. It looks cleaner, feels less cluttered, and is easier to navigate. Features like phone-to-PC mirroring and cross-device connectivity also proved useful in everyday scenarios.

AI is a big part of the experience too, with a lot of it powered by Google Gemini. I get features like AI Creation, AI Search, and Circle to Search. The AI Photography Suite is where things get more interesting, as it lets you rework images after capturing them, even changing the overall mood or setting quite dramatically.

On the update front, Vivo is promising four OS updates and six years of security patches. That is a strong commitment at this price and adds to the overall sense of long-term reliability.

Vivo V70 FE’s Battery & Charging: Forget your charger at home

Battery life is one area where this phone genuinely stands out for me.

The V70 FE packs a 7000mAh battery, and while large capacities are becoming more common now, this still feels impressive for this segment. More importantly, it actually translates well into real-world use.

In my experience, getting through a full day and a half was easy. On lighter days, I could push it close to two days without stressing about the battery at all.

Charging speeds are solid too. With 90W fast charging, going from 0 to 100 percent takes about an hour, which feels reasonable given the size of the battery.

Overall, this is the kind of battery setup that quietly does its job. I did not find myself checking the percentage constantly or worrying about topping it up, and that is exactly how it should be.

Vivo V70 FE’s Verdict: Strikes the right balance

The V70 FE quietly gets most things right without making you feel like you have settled anywhere.

For me, the design is a clear standout. The Northern Lights Purple variant not only looks striking but also carries a premium feel that is rare at this price. The fact that Vivo has managed to keep it this slim and light while fitting in a 7000mAh battery makes it even more impressive.

The display is sharp and bright, the cameras are reliable across most situations, and OriginOS 6 delivers a polished, consistent experience in daily use. Battery life is easily among the best in this segment, and the phone handles heat well during gaming.

Yes, the ultrawide camera is not great in low light, and the benchmarks are not particularly exciting. But in actual use, neither feels like a real drawback.

If you want something distinctive, long-lasting, and well-rounded, the V70 FE makes a strong case.

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