- The Snapdragon 8 Elite Gen 5 and 200MP Camera">Vivo X300 Ultra features a dual 200MP camera system co-engineered with Zeiss, headlined by a near 1-inch main sensor for 35mm shots and a new 200MP 85mm telephoto.
- For the first time, Vivo's Ultra series is confirmed for a global release, though an official India launch date and price are yet to be announced.
- The phone introduces unique hardware teleconverters, the "Cannon 400" and "Lipstick 200," to extend its optical zoom range up to 400mm.
Vivo just revealed the X300 Ultra, a phone that doesn't just want a better camera. It wants to replace your camera. Forget iterative sensor bumps, the biggest news here is the optional hardware, those clip-on teleconverters. It's a weird, ambitious swing at Samsung's Galaxy S Ultra series, built for the person who thinks phone cameras still aren't serious enough.
Vivo X300 Ultra Specifications
| Specification | Details |
|---|---|
| Main Camera | 200MP Sony Lytia 901 (1/1.12-inch), 35mm equivalent |
| Telephoto Camera | 200MP periscope, 85mm equivalent, f/2.67 aperture |
| Ultra-Wide Camera | Large 1/1.28-inch sensor, 14mm equivalent |
| Teleconverters | Optional "Cannon 400" (400mm) & "Lipstick 200" (200mm) |
| Video | Multi-Focal 4K Master Color Video |
| Software | OriginOS 6 (China launch) |
| China Price (12GB/256GB) | 6,999 Yuan (~₹81,000 est.) |
| Global Release | Confirmed, details pending |
What's New: The Camera System Without Rivals
You don't put a 35mm lens on a phone by accident. That's the first clue Vivo is chasing a different crowd. The 1/1.12-inch main sensor isn't just bigger than the one in your current phone, it's paired with a classic focal length photographers actually like. The second 200MP sensor is an 85mm portrait lens. But here's the catch, it's got a dimmer f/2.67 aperture compared to last year's model. You're trading some low-light zoom capability for those megapixels. This is a phone built for detail in good light.
The 200MP Telephoto and the Teleconverter Revolution
The teleconverters are the real story, though. The "Cannon 400" and "Lipstick 200" are physical lenses you snap onto the phone. They turn the built-in 85mm zoom into a 200mm or 400mm monster. Think about that. It's a direct attack on the biggest weakness in phone photography, the mushy mess of digital zoom. If you want to shoot a bird in a tree or your kid on a soccer field, this gives you a real optical path to do it. It's awkward and wonderfully extra, like putting a turbocharger on a sedan.
Design, Build, and Display
Based on the promo shots, it looks like another Vivo Ultra phone. That means a giant, circular camera bump on the back in a shiny Green finish, with Zeiss branding front and center. It'll be glass and metal, and it'll feel expensive. What we don't know is just as telling, the sources don't bother mentioning the screen specs. That's how laser-focused this launch is on the cameras. You can bet it'll have a great 120Hz AMOLED panel, but that's not the point this time.
Performance, Software, and Real-World Use
We don't have the chipset or battery details, but it's going to be the fastest thing available, probably a Snapdragon 8 Gen 5. It'll need all that power. Processing a 200MP photo isn't trivial, and the new Multi-Focal 4K video feature has to keep colors consistent across three very different lenses. The software is OriginOS 6 for China, which is a whole thing. A global release would strip that back to something cleaner. The real test is whether the phone can handle all this computational photography without burning your hand or dying before lunch.
India Pricing, Availability, and Considerations
Here's where it gets fuzzy. The phone is official in China at 6,999 Yuan, which is about ₹81,000. Do not expect that to be the India price. It never is. Taxes and duties will push it higher. The good news is Vivo finally confirmed a global release for an Ultra model. The bad news is we have zero dates for India. If it shows up, you'll find it on Amazon, Flipkart, and at Croma stores. But that's a big "if" for now, and you'd be getting a different global software build, not the Chinese version.
Vivo X300 Ultra vs. The Competition
Android Police nailed it, this is for people who think Samsung's next Ultra phone will be "too basic." Samsung's play is a more rounded system with multiple dedicated lenses. Vivo's bet is on two monstrously capable sensors you can extend with physical gadgets. It's a philosophy clash: integrated Swiss Army knife versus a dedicated scalpel you can modify. Compared to its own predecessor, the X300 Ultra gains megapixels on the zoom but loses a bit of light gathering. It's a calculated swap that tells you exactly what Vivo values, pure resolution.
Frequently Asked Questions
What is the official price of the Vivo X300 Ultra in India?
There isn't one, Vivo hasn't announced Indian plans or pricing. The Chinese price is 6,999 Yuan.
What do the "Cannon 400" and "Lipstick 200" do?
They're clip-on lenses that turn the phone's 85mm optical zoom into a 200mm or 400mm zoom, giving you real optical reach.
Is the Vivo X300 Ultra coming globally?
Yes, it's confirmed for a global release, but we don't know which countries or when.
The Verdict
Let's be clear, the X300 Ultra is a specialist tool. It's for the person who edits photos on a computer, who knows what 35mm and 85mm mean, and who genuinely considers leaving their dedicated camera at home. For everyone else, it's overkill with a side of uncertainty. The global software and support network are still question marks. But as a proof of concept, it's thrilling. It proves at least one company thinks the best phone camera shouldn't just fit in your pocket, it should also clip onto the outside of it.
Sources
- gsmarena.com
- reddit.com
- youtube.com
- androidpolice.com
- facebook.com
- androidheadlines.com
- instagram.com
