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HONOR 600 Pro vs Galaxy S26: A First Look Before Launch

 

Massive battery, aggressive camera hardware, and an AI editor put HONOR on offense, but Samsung still wins on comfort and ecosystem.

HONOR chases creators and heavy users with big battery and AI tools, while Samsung sticks to a thinner, more familiar all‑rounder.

 

The HONOR 600 Pro is perfect for anyone who cares more about getting creative with their photos, enjoying long battery life, and getting good value for their money rather than chasing after the thinnest, lightest flagship phone. On paper, it looks more ambitious than Samsung’s Galaxy S26 in a few key areas – especially zoom and battery – while Samsung stays closer to a refined, compact all‑rounder.

This is a pre-launch comparison, so that some specs may shift. But the direction is already obvious, and it’s worth paying attention to.

Design & build

Early specs suggest the HONOR 600 Pro is likely the bigger, heavier phone here, while the S26 is expected to come in slightly shorter, narrower, and noticeably lighter. That difference on paper may sound trivial until it doesn’t — on a long commute, gripped in one hand, the S26 disappears into your palm while the HONOR announces itself. Both phones are built around metal frames, so they’re clearly not trying to feel cheap or disposable.

 

Display

HONOR is reportedly hitting 8,000 nits peak brightness on a 6.57-inch 120 Hz screen. Samsung’s S26 tops out around 2,600 nits on a 6.3-inch panel. Both are fast and fluid. But if you’ve ever tried to follow navigation in direct Gulf sun, or film anything outdoors at noon, you know that brightness number matters more than almost any other spec on the sheet. The S26 will look gorgeous indoors and, as usual for Samsung, will likely deliver rich colors and deep contrast in a more compact footprint.

Both phones should feel buttery‑smooth for social scrolling and gaming, thanks to 120 Hz refresh rates. The practical difference is context: the S26’s smaller screen will suit people who mostly message, browse, and watch short clips, and who prioritize comfort in one hand. The HONOR 600 Pro’s larger, brighter canvas looks better suited to watching full‑length videos, editing content on the commute, or running split‑screen with chat and documents side by side. You give up some ergonomics for that extra visual space.

Camera and AI editor

Samsung’s S26 gets a 50+10+12 MP triple system and a 12 MP front camera. The HONOR 600 Pro reportedly ships with a 200 MP main camera, a 50 MP and 12 MP lens, a dedicated color sensor, and a 50 MP selfie camera. One of these is hedging. One is not.

The more interesting question is what happens after the shot. HONOR is building an actual creative toolkit into the camera — AI image-to-video, moving photo editing, and an AI photo agent that suggests crops and effects without you touching a third-party app. Samsung has AI features too, but they sit lighter on top of a camera experience that hasn’t changed much in feel since the S23.

If you shoot for pleasure, edit on the phone, and care about what you can make rather than just capture, the HONOR’s software stack is genuinely worth watching. If you want to tap, shoot, share, and be done — the S26 handles that cold.

Performance, battery, and speed

Under the hood, both phones are targeting high‑end Android performance. The HONOR 600 Pro is expected to ship with Qualcomm’s Snapdragon 8 Elite, while the S26 uses the Exynos 2600 (2nm-based chipset). In real use, that should mean fast app launches, smooth multitasking, and comfortable gaming on either device. You’ll be able to jump between Instagram, email, maps, and a game without feeling much lag, at least in this early view.

Packed with a 7,000 mAh battery with 80 W wired and 50 W wireless charging, versus Samsung’s 4,300 mAh at 25 W wired and 15 W wireless. HONOR’s numbers aren’t just better — they’re from a different category of thinking. A 7,000 mAh cell on a Snapdragon 8 Elite should get through a full day of heavy use and still have something left when you get home. The S26 will need a top-up if you spend a few hours on video or 5G.

The catch, as always: that battery is part of why the phone weighs what it weighs. There’s no free lunch here.

The trade‑off is the same one we saw in the design section. HONOR’s giant battery and faster charging are a clear win for travelers, creators, and power users who live on their phones, but they are also why the device is heavier and thicker. Samsung’s S26 will likely feel leaner and easier to carry, at the cost of more frequent visits to the charger for heavy users.

Software, updates, and ecosystem

The HONOR 600 Pro runs Snapdragon 8 Elite silicon — while the S26 gets the Exynos 2600. In daily use, neither will feel slow. This is not a performance story.

Software is where the real split is. Samsung’s One UI is mature, broadly supported, and plugged into a hardware family most people have already bought into — watches, earbuds, tablets, TVs. It’s a solid choice for anyone already in that orbit.

HONOR has a fresh take: their phone acts like its own little ecosystem! With smart AI features right on the device, handy creative tools, and a camera that helps you improve your photos even after you take them, it’s pretty good. If you’re not into collecting extra gadgets, this approach works great! But if you are a gadget lover, Samsung might just take the win here without breaking a sweat.

So even before launch, the philosophical split is clear. HONOR is offering a more experimental, creator‑centric software experience that lives largely on the device. Samsung is doubling down on consistency, familiar One UI behavior, and a broader ecosystem that rewards you for staying inside the Galaxy family. Which is “better” depends on whether you want your phone to be a standalone creative tool or a hub in a wider set of gadgets.

Verdict: Who should buy which? (early take)

The Galaxy S26 is the phone for people who want a reliable, compact Android that slots into a life already built around Samsung. It will be well-reviewed, well-supported, and easy to recommend to almost anyone.

The HONOR 600 Pro is for people who want more — more zoom range, more battery, more tools for making things — and don’t mind carrying a slightly bigger phone to get it: creatives, heavy travelers, anyone who’s ever run out of battery at the worst possible moment.

Neither is the wrong answer. But only one of them is trying to do something new.

Full reviews pending. Both phones arrive in stores before summer.

 

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