Vivo V60 is set to hit Pakistan soon. The company put up teasers on Facebook and their site, counting down to the release. Right now, it’s in the pre-launch phase, with full details out on their microsite. Price isn’t out yet, but people expect it to be around 145,000 rupees based on other places. Here’s everything broken down, with the facts and what they mean for you as a user.
Design and Build
The phone has curves on all four sides of the front and back. That makes it comfortable to hold and gives it a sleek feel. The back panel has slanted edges around the cameras, and the whole thing looks like higher-end models from Vivo. The camera bump is square, similar to their X200 series. It comes in Mist Grey, which is a muted gray, and Desert Gold, a sandy gold color. The body is about 7.5mm thick and weighs 190 grams, so it’s not heavy. For toughness, it has IP68 and IP69 ratings. IP68 lets it sit in 1.5 meters of fresh water for half an hour without damage. IP69 adds protection from hot water sprays under pressure. This is good for drops in water or dust, but don’t take it swimming on purpose, and warranty won’t cover if it breaks from liquids over time.


Display
On the front, there’s a 6.77-inch AMOLED screen. AMOLED means each pixel lights itself, so blacks look really dark and colors pop. The resolution is 1080 by 2392 pixels, which is full HD plus—sharp for watching videos or reading, but not the highest out there. It refreshes at 120 times per second, making swipes and games feel smooth. It handles HDR10+, which boosts contrast and colors in apps like YouTube. Brightness peaks at 5000 nits for bright spots in HDR stuff, but in everyday use, it hits about 1500 nits max. That’s enough to see clearly outside in sun. The edges around the screen are thin and even all around.
Camera System
Cameras are a big part here, tuned with Zeiss lenses. They have a coating to cut down on reflections and make shots clearer. The main camera is 50 megapixels with a sensor that catches good detail, and it has stabilization to stop blur from movement. The new telephoto is also 50 megapixels, stabilized, and zooms optically up to 3.5 times—meaning you get clear close-ups without pixel loss. It can push to 10 times or even 100 times with software help, but quality drops after optical. The ultrawide is 8 megapixels, fitting wide scenes like groups or views, with a 106-degree angle after fixing distortion. Front camera is 50 megapixels for selfies, with a wide view to include more. All can shoot 4K video at 30 frames per second—high res but not super smooth for action. Extra stuff includes AI that adds seasonal backgrounds to portraits, like spring or winter effects, and modes for quick video edits. The colors aim for natural tones thanks to Zeiss tweaks.






Performance and Software
Inside, it runs on a Snapdragon 7 Gen 4 chip. This is a mid-level processor with eight cores, clocked up to 2.8 GHz. It’s fast for apps, multitasking, and lighter games without getting too hot. RAM goes up to 16 gigabytes, and you can add virtual RAM from storage for more. Storage tops at 512 gigabytes. Software is Funtouch OS 15 on Android 15, with Vivo’s extras like quick tools. They promise four years of big Android updates and six years of security fixes to keep it safe and current.
Battery and Charging
The battery is 6500 milliamp hours, which is big—lasts a day or two on normal use. It charges at 90 watts, so from empty, it fills quickly, like half in 20 minutes with the right charger. There’s an infrared blaster to control TVs or ACs like a remote. Speakers are stereo for better sound, but no headphone jack—use wireless or adapters. It supports 5G, WiFi, Bluetooth 5.4, and in some areas, NFC for payments.
Variants start from 8 gig RAM with 128 gig storage, up to 16 and 512. Launch should be in the next few days or early next week in Pakistan. Check Vivo’s site for the exact price when it drops.















