Infinix Note 60 Ultra Review — The Most MENTAL Phone of 2026 (Unboxing & Tour)

Infinix Note 60 Ultra

🏁 The Verdict Upfront: Mental Design, Not Quite “Ultra” Performance

The Infinix Note 60 Ultra is the most bonkers smartphone of 2026 — with Italian supercar-inspired design, a dot-matrix display, 7,000mAh battery, and two-way satellite calling.

But is it truly “Ultra”?

Not quite.

Despite the flashy Pininfarina design partnership (Ferrari, Alfa Romeo), impressive 200MP camera, and genuinely massive 7,000mAh battery, the Infinix Note 60 Ultra falls short of “Ultra” status in key areas:

Only IP64 rated (splash-resistant, not waterproof)
Only 3 OS updates (flagships get 7 years)
Optical fingerprint (not ultrasonic)
MediaTek Dimensity 8400 (not flagship 9400)
No HDR streaming (in Netflix at launch)

What it DOES deliver:

  • Insane Italian design (flat camera module, floating taillight)
  • 7,000mAh silicon-carbon battery (all-day beast)
  • 100W wired + 50W wireless charging
  • Two-way satellite calling (12 countries including UK)
  • 200MP main + 50MP periscope (3.5x optical, 100x digital)
  • 6.78″ AMOLED 144Hz, 4,500 nits peak
  • Incredible unboxing (wireless pad, Kevlar case, 100W charger)

Price: MYR 3,000 (~$760 / £570 / ₹70,000)

Bottom line: This is a mid-range phone with flagship aspirations. Buy it for the design, battery, and satellite features — not for cutting-edge performance or ultra-premium build quality.

The Unboxing Experience — Absolutely Mental

The Massive Box

The Infinix Note 60 Ultra comes in the most ridiculously oversized box I’ve unboxed in 2026.

What’s inside:

  1. Infinix Note 60 Ultra (obviously)
  2. 100W Infinix charger (two-pin)
  3. USB-C charging cable
  4. Wireless charging pad (50W MagSafe-style)
  5. Kevlar MagCase (magnetic attachment)
  6. Screen protector (pre-applied or separate)
  7. Type-C earphones (plasticky, nothing special)
  8. Track-Edition SIM ejector pin (incredibly snazzy)
  9. Automotive-inspired display stand (for the box itself)

This is one of the best unboxing experiences of 2026.

Most phones come with a charger and a cable. Infinix offers a complete ecosystem — wireless charging, a magnetic case, earphones (rare in 2026), and premium accessories.

Verdict: Infinix absolutely nails the unboxing. This feels like a $1,000+ phone experience for ~$760.

The Design — Pininfarina’s Supercar DNA

The Pininfarina Partnership

Infinix partnered with Pininfarina, the legendary Italian design house responsible for:

  • Ferrari sports cars
  • Alfa Romeo vehicles
  • High-end automotive design for 95 years

And it shows.

The Note 60 Ultra doesn’t look like any other phone in 2026.

The Uni-Chassis Camera Module

This is the standout design feature.

Instead of a traditional camera bump (which protrudes awkwardly), Infinix created a completely flat back using:

  • Single sheet of Gorilla Glass Victus covering the entire rear
  • Camera lenses sit underneath the glass
  • Aluminum unibody frame

Result: The phone lies completely flat on tables. No rocking. No wobbling.

It’s brilliant.

The Floating Taillight

Just like a sports car, the Note 60 Ultra has a floating taillight indicator on the camera module.

What it does:

  • Lights up when powering on
  • Illuminates for notifications
  • Glows during charging
  • Customizable colors/patterns

It’s gloriously unnecessary and absolutely mental.

The Dot-Matrix Display

Similar to the Nothing Phone 3, the Note 60 Ultra has a dot-matrix display on the back.

Features:

  • Shows notifications
  • Album art animations when playing music
  • Pixel pet (digital Tamagotchi-style pet)
  • Mini-games (simple, not replacing actual gaming)

My take: It’s a gimmick, but a fun gimmick. The album art animations are genuinely cool.

Available Colors

Four Italian-inspired colorways:

  1. Torino Black (boring but elegant)
  2. Monza Red (racing-inspired)
  3. Amalfi Blue (Mediterranean vibes)
  4. Roma Silver (classic Italian luxury)

I got the Torino Black (because I don’t like fun, apparently).

Build Quality

Materials:

  • Aluminum frame (premium feel)
  • Gorilla Glass 7i on front (scratch-resistant)
  • Gorilla Glass Victus on back (tougher than standard)
  • IP64 rating (dust-tight, splash-resistant)

The problem: IP64 is disappointing for an “Ultra” phone.

IP64 means:

  • ✅ Dust-tight (fully protected)
  • Only splash-resistant (NOT waterproof)

Compare to real Ultra phones:

  • Samsung S26 Ultra: IP68 (fully waterproof)
  • iPhone 17 Pro Max: IP68 (fully waterproof)
  • Google Pixel 10 Pro: IP68 (fully waterproof)

You cannot submerge the Note 60 Ultra in water. Drop it in the toilet, sink, or pool? It’s probably dead.

For an “Ultra” phone, this is unacceptable.

Weight & Dimensions

  • Weight: 220g (hefty, but expected with 7,000mAh battery)
  • Thickness: 7.9mm (surprisingly thin for the battery size)

Comparison: This weighs more than some foldable phones I’ve tested recently.

It has a proper heft to it, which makes it feel premium.

The Display — Bright But Imperfect

Specifications

  • Size: 6.78″ AMOLED
  • Resolution: 1.5K (2644 x 1208 pixels)
  • Refresh rate: 144Hz (great for gaming)
  • Peak brightness: 4,500 nits (insane)
  • PWM dimming: 2,304Hz (reduces flicker sensitivity)
  • Protection: Gorilla Glass 7i

Performance

Brightness: At 4,500 nits peak, this is one of the brightest displays in 2026.

Perfect for:

  • Direct sunlight use
  • HDR content (when supported)
  • Outdoor navigation

Contrast: Deep, gorgeous blacks (OLED advantage).

Colors: Reasonably poppy on default settings, with option to boost saturation in display settings.

Refresh rate: 144Hz is excellent for gaming — supported titles feel buttery smooth.

The Problems

1. No HDR streaming support (at launch)

Netflix, Amazon Prime, Disney+ — none support HDR on the Note 60 Ultra at launch.

This might be a pre-release issue, but it’s disappointing for a phone with this display quality.

2. Fingerprint sensor placement

The optical fingerprint sensor is wedged right at the bottom of the screen.

Problems:

  • Requires awkward thumb stretching
  • Not ultrasonic (less secure, slower than Samsung/Apple)
  • Not “Ultra” by 2026 standards

Real Ultra phones use ultrasonic sensors (faster, more secure, work with wet fingers).

Performance — Capable, Not Flagship

Chipset: MediaTek Dimensity 8400 Ultimate

Specifications:

  • Process: 4nm
  • CPU: 1x 3.25GHz (prime) + 3x 3.0GHz (performance) + 4x 2.1GHz (efficiency)
  • GPU: Mali-G720 MC7
  • RAM: 12GB LPDDR5X
  • Storage: 256GB or 512GB UFS 3.1

Geekbench 6 scores:

  • Single-core: 1,609
  • Multi-core: 6,762
Infinix Note 60 Ultra

Gaming Performance

Tested: Genshin Impact, PUBG, Call of Duty Mobile

Results:

  • Genshin Impact: Handles well even on higher settings
  • Occasional stutters on maxed-out graphics
  • 144Hz gaming is smooth on supported titles
  • 3D IceCore cooling (vapor chamber + copper sheet) keeps it cool

Thermal management: Excellent. Even after extended gaming, the phone stayed cool.

Real-World Performance

For everyday use:

  • Apps launch instantly
  • Multitasking is smooth
  • No lag or stuttering
  • 12GB RAM handles everything well

But it’s not flagship-tier.

The Dimensity 8400 is a mid-range chip.

Compare to:

  • Snapdragon 8 Elite Gen 5 (Galaxy S26 Ultra)
  • Apple A19 Pro (iPhone 17 Pro Max)
  • MediaTek Dimensity 9400 (actual flagship chip)

The Dimensity 8400 is fast, but not “Ultra.”

Battery Life — The Real Star

7,000mAh Silicon-Carbon Battery

This is massive.

Most phones have 4,500-5,500mAh batteries. The Note 60 Ultra has 7,000mAh.

Real-world battery life:

  • Heavy use: Full day + more
  • Moderate use: 1.5-2 days easily
  • Light use: 2+ days

My testing:

  • Heavy camera use
  • Gaming sessions
  • Social media scrolling
  • YouTube video playback

Result: I could not kill this battery in one day, no matter how hard I tried.

Even the most demanding users will get all-day battery life.

Battery Self-Healing Technology

Infinix claims the battery can recover ~1% health after every 200 charging cycles.

What this means: After 200 charges (about 6-8 months), the battery “heals” some degradation.

Does it work? Too early to tell, but it’s a unique feature.

Charging Speeds

100W wired charging:

  • 0-100% in ~48 minutes
  • Included 100W charger in box

50W wireless charging:

  • Faster than most wireless chargers
  • Magnetic alignment (MagSafe-style)
  • Included wireless pad in box

This is excellent.

Most phones don’t include wireless chargers. Infinix gives you everything.

Cameras — 200MP Hype vs Reality

Camera Specifications

Rear cameras:

  1. 200MP main (Samsung ISOCELL HPE, 1/1.4″, f/1.7, OIS)
  2. 50MP periscope telephoto (Samsung GN5, 3.5x optical zoom, OIS)
  3. 8MP ultrawide (f/2.2, 112° field of view)

Front camera:

  • 32MP selfie (4K @ 30fps max)

Main Camera Performance

Daylight photos:

  • ✅ Reasonably capable
  • ✅ Good detail (200MP helps)
  • ✅ Decent colors
  • Not Pixel 10 Pro level

Low-light photos:

  • ✅ Night mode works
  • ❌ More noise than flagship phones
  • ❌ Processing can be aggressive

Portrait mode:

  • ✅ Decent edge detection
  • ✅ Good bokeh simulation
  • ❌ Not as natural as iPhone/Pixel

Telephoto Performance

3.5x optical zoom:

  • ✅ Actually usable
  • ✅ Sharp details
  • ✅ OIS helps

Up to 100x digital zoom:

  • ❌ Basically unusable beyond 10x
  • Digital zoom quality degrades fast

Ultrawide Camera

8MP ultrawide:

  • ❌ Lower resolution than competitors
  • ✅ 112° field of view is good
  • ❌ Detail drops noticeably

Video Recording

Rear camera:

  • 4K @ 60fps (main camera)
  • 4K @ 30fps (telephoto)
  • Good stabilization (OIS + EIS)
  • Decent audio pickup

Front camera:

  • 4K @ 30fps (no 60fps option)
  • Solid stabilization
  • Fine for video calls and vlogging

Camera App

XOS camera app:

  • Lots of features (pro mode, night mode, portrait, etc.)
  • Not user-friendly — features “squirreled away” in UI
  • No RAW shooting (disappointing for pro mode)

Camera Verdict

The 200MP main camera is decent, not exceptional.

Don’t expect:

  • Pixel 10 Pro computational photography
  • iPhone 17 Pro Max video quality
  • Samsung S26 Ultra zoom capabilities

It’s a capable mid-range camera system, not an ultra-flagship.

Software — XOS 16 (Love It or Hate It)

Operating System

  • Android 16
  • XOS 16 (Infinix’s custom skin)
  • 3 major OS updates (up to Android 19)
  • 5 years security patches (until 2031)

The Good

Clean enough:

  • Not as bloated as some Chinese skins
  • Customization options (themes, icons, colors)
  • “Ultra-only tweaks” (snazzy icons, red hue from Pininfarina)
Infinix Note 60 Ultra

Useful features:

  • eSIM support
  • Dual SIM + eSIM (max 2 active at once)
  • 256GB or 512GB storage options
  • No microSD card slot (disappointing)

The Bad

Only 3 OS updates is NOT “Ultra.”

Real Ultra phones:

  • Samsung S26 Ultra: 7 years
  • Google Pixel 10 Pro: 7 years
  • iPhone 17 Pro Max: 7 years (historically 5-6)

Infinix Note 60 Ultra: 3 years

This is mid-range update support, not flagship.

Two-Way Satellite Communications

This is genuinely impressive.

What it is: Direct-to-cell satellite calling and messaging via Thoria satellites.

Supported regions: 12 countries including:

  • United Kingdom
  • Parts of Europe
  • Select other markets

What it does:

  • Make emergency calls without cellular coverage
  • Send text messages via satellite
  • Share emergency location

Requirements:

  • Thoria-compatible SIM card
  • Supported region

My testing: I don’t have a Thoria SIM, so I couldn’t test this.

But if you hike, camp, or travel to remote areas, this is a killer feature.

Audio — JBL Tuning Saves It

Dual Stereo Speakers

Placement:

  • Top speaker (earpiece)
  • Bottom speaker (main)

Performance:

  • Respectable volume when maxed out
  • Good clarity
  • Bass could use help
  • Top speaker is weak (“powerful as a housefly’s fart”)

Bottom speaker does 90% of the work.

JBL Tuning

The speakers are JBL-tuned, which helps.

Compared to non-tuned speakers: These sound noticeably better.

Compared to flagship speakers: Not quite iPhone/Samsung level.

Bluetooth Streaming

Bluetooth audio: Absolutely fine. No complaints.

What’s Missing for “Ultra” Status

Let me be clear: The Infinix Note 60 Ultra is NOT a true Ultra flagship.

Here’s what’s missing:

1. IP68 Water Resistance

  • Has: IP64 (splash-resistant)
  • Ultra phones have: IP68 (fully waterproof)

2. Flagship Chipset

  • Has: MediaTek Dimensity 8400 (mid-range)
  • Ultra phones have: Snapdragon 8 Elite Gen 5 / Apple A19 Pro / Dimensity 9400

3. Ultrasonic Fingerprint

  • Has: Optical fingerprint (slower, less secure)
  • Ultra phones have: Ultrasonic (faster, more secure, works wet)

4. 7-Year Updates

  • Has: 3 OS updates + 5 years security
  • Ultra phones have: 7 years total support

5. Flagship Cameras

  • Has: Decent 200MP main, but not class-leading
  • Ultra phones have: Best-in-class computational photography

6. HDR Streaming (at launch)

  • Has: No HDR on Netflix/Prime (yet)
  • Ultra phones have: Full HDR10+ support

7. Premium Build

  • Has: Aluminum + glass, but only IP64
  • Ultra phones have: Titanium/aluminum + IP68

The Note 60 Ultra is a mid-range phone with flagship design and battery.


Pricing & Value

Official Pricing

Malaysia: MYR 3,000 (~$760 / £570 / ₹70,000)

Global pricing: Not yet announced

Storage Options

  • 12GB RAM + 256GB storage: MYR 3,000
  • 12GB RAM + 512GB storage: Price TBA

Is It Worth It?

At ~$760, this is good value for:

  • Unique Pininfarina design
  • 7,000mAh battery (best-in-class)
  • 100W wired + 50W wireless charging
  • Two-way satellite calling
  • 200MP camera system
  • Complete unboxing accessories

But you can get better value:

  • OnePlus 15R: ~$600, Snapdragon 8 Elite Gen 4, better performance
  • Realme GT 8 Pro: ~$650, better chipset, similar battery
  • Poco F7 Ultra: ~$700, Snapdragon 8 Elite Gen 5, flagship specs

Buy the Note 60 Ultra if you prioritize design and battery over performance.

Who Should Buy This?

✅ Buy the Infinix Note 60 Ultra If:

1. You want insane battery life

  • 7,000mAh lasts 1.5-2 days easily
  • 100W + 50W charging

2. Design matters more than performance

  • Pininfarina styling is genuinely unique
  • Floating taillight and dot-matrix display are fun

3. You need satellite connectivity

  • Two-way satellite calling in 12 countries
  • Great for hiking, camping, remote travel

4. You want incredible unboxing value

  • Wireless charging pad included
  • Kevlar MagCase included
  • 100W charger included
  • Best accessories bundle of 2026

5. You’re an Infinix fan

  • XOS 16 is familiar and customizable

❌ Don’t Buy If:

1. You want true flagship performance

  • Dimensity 8400 is mid-range, not flagship

2. You need full water resistance

  • IP64 only (splash-resistant, not waterproof)

3. Camera quality is priority

  • 200MP sounds impressive but isn’t class-leading

4. You want 7 years of updates

  • Only 3 OS updates (mid-range support)

5. You prefer stock Android

  • XOS 16 is heavily customized

Final Verdict: Mental, Not Ultra

The Infinix Note 60 Ultra is the most bonkers smartphone of 2026.

What I love:

  • ✅ Absolutely mental Pininfarina design
  • ✅ 7,000mAh battery is a beast
  • ✅ 100W + 50W charging (with pads included!)
  • ✅ Two-way satellite calling (unique feature)
  • ✅ Incredible unboxing experience
  • ✅ Flat camera module (finally!)

What disappoints:

  • ❌ IP64 only (not waterproof)
  • ❌ Dimensity 8400 (not flagship)
  • ❌ Only 3 OS updates (not 7 years)
  • ❌ Optical fingerprint (not ultrasonic)
  • ❌ Cameras are decent, not exceptional

Is it a true “Ultra” phone?

No.

It’s a mid-range phone with flagship design aspirations and killer battery life.

Buy it for the experience, the battery, and the sheer mental Italian design.

Don’t buy it expecting flagship performance or ultra-premium build quality.

Score: 7.5/10 — Great design and battery, but not quite “Ultra.”

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