There’s no point pretending otherwise.
The first thing you notice about the HONOR 600 Pro isn’t the AI features, the camera system, or even the massive battery.
It’s the fact that this phone looks very familiar.
Pick it up for the first time and the comparisons to Apple’s iPhone lineup hit almost immediately. They’ve even opted for an orange colourway. It has a camera bump reminiscent of the iPhones camera “plateau”, flat edges with a polished frame and ultra-thin bezels. The overall silhouette sort of screams Apple. HONOR clearly knows exactly what aesthetic it’s chasing here, and it works if you dont mind the association.
The HONOR 600 Pro feels incredibly premium in the hand.
And that’s what makes this phone interesting.
Because while some brands try so hard to look different that they end up making devices that feel awkward or over-designed, HONOR has gone in the opposite direction. The 600 Pro leans heavily into a luxury flagship identity, and the result is a phone that genuinely looks and feels far more expensive than most people would expect.
Whether you see that as inspiration or imitation will probably depend on how much you like Apple’s design language.
A Serious Push Into Premium Territory
Design similarities aside, the HONOR 600 Pro does make a strong first impression.
The display is immediately one of the standout features. HONOR is using a bright AMOLED panel with incredibly slim bezels, and it gives the phone a modern, almost futuristic look. Reviews globally have praised the display quality, brightness, and overall polish of the hardware experience.
Performance also looks promising on paper, with flagship-level Snapdragon 8 Gen Elite silicon paired with generous memory and storage configurations. Early reports suggest the phone handles multitasking, gaming, and AI-heavy workloads comfortably, which we will surely test in a our full review.
Battery life could end up being one of the biggest wins here.
HONOR has equipped the 600 Pro with a massive 7000 mAh battery and fast charging capabilities that comfortably outperform many traditional flagship devices.
Then there’s the camera system.
The company is pushing its 200MP AI-powered camera setup hard, especially around low-light photography and AI-enhanced portrait processing. From the samples shown so far, the phone appears capable of producing sharp, vibrant images with a strong emphasis on social-media-ready processing rather than pure photographic realism.
Which, to be fair, is exactly what most consumers want in 2026.
The AI Feature Everyone Will Talk About
But the real headline feature here is HONOR’s new AI Image-to-Video 2.0 system.
This is the feature the company is betting heavily on.
The idea is simple: take static photos and transform them into short AI-generated video clips using prompts, templates, and motion effects. HONOR says users can even combine multiple images and create cinematic-style sequences directly on the phone.
And yes, it’s impressive.
At least initially.
The demos are eye-catching, slightly creepy, and exactly the kind of thing social media loves right now.
But there’s an important detail HONOR’s marketing doesn’t exactly scream from the rooftops.
The feature operates on a freemium-style model.
Users only get a limited number of generations before needing to subscribe or pay for additional usage. That changes the conversation quite a bit because this isn’t simply an “included AI feature” baked fully into the device. It’s effectively an AI service layered on top of the phone experience.
That distinction matters.
Especially when AI is becoming one of the biggest selling points in modern smartphones.
There’s also the broader question of whether consumers actually need AI-generated image-to-video tools on their smartphones, or whether this is another example of the tech industry desperately searching for the next viral feature.
Either way, HONOR clearly believes this is where mobile experiences are heading.
MagicOS Still Feels Very… Familiar
Software is another area where the Apple comparisons continue.
MagicOS has evolved significantly over the years and feels smoother and more refined than older HONOR devices, but there are still moments where the UI feels heavily inspired by iOS aesthetics and interaction design.
That said, for many users, familiarity isn’t necessarily a bad thing.
If anything, it may make switching from an iPhone to Android feel less intimidating.
Early Verdict
The HONOR 600 Pro feels like a company making a very deliberate statement.
HONOR is saying it can build a device that looks, feels, and performs like a premium flagship while still undercutting traditional high-end competitors.
The hardware feels premium.
The display looks fantastic.
Battery life could be exceptional.
Performance appears flagship-grade.
But the real conversation starts when pricing enters the picture.
In South Africa, the HONOR 600 Pro launches at R19,999 and will be available in Golden White and Orange, while the standard HONOR 600 lands at R14,999 in Black and Orange.
That pricing makes HONOR’s strategy very clear.
The company is positioning the 600 Pro aggressively below traditional ultra-premium flagships while still offering a design and feature set that aims squarely at buyers who want the “luxury smartphone” experience without crossing into R30,000 territory.
And that’s where this phone becomes genuinely interesting.
Because at R19,999, the HONOR 600 Pro isn’t cheap. But it’s also entering a market where flagship pricing has become borderline ridiculous. Against that backdrop, HONOR may have found a very smart middle ground.
