
The successor to the Huawei P60 series, the Huawei P70 series, is expected to be launched soon. Like the previous models, the upcoming series may include Basic, Pro and Art versions. The Huawei P70 mobile phone, which is scheduled to be released in China in March, was previously leaked. Now, a leak of the phone’s protective cover points to the camera module of the Huawei P70. Compared to the current Huawei P60 model, the alleged phone is said to come with an updated camera module.
Leaked cases (via) for the Huawei P70 have been posted on digital chat site Tipster Weibo. It features a triangular rear camera module that houses three rear cameras and an LED flash. On the other hand, the older Huawei P60 mobile phone has a rectangular camera module.
The Huawei P70 is expected to run on its own Kirin chipset and sport a 6.58-inch or 6.8-inch 2.5D 1.5K LTPO display. The phone has a 50-megapixel OmniVision OV50H variable aperture primary sensor, a 50-megapixel Sony IMX989 sensor and an ultra-wide-angle lens, and a 50-megapixel telephoto lens with 4x optical zoom. It is also equipped with satellite communication technology.
Huawei P60 comes with a 6.67-inch 120Hz Full HD+ OLED LTPO display (1220 x 2700 pixels), Snapdragon 8+ Gen 1 SoC, 48MP selfie camera with OIS support, triple rear camera etc… It has a 66W battery . 4815 mAh battery with fast wired charging support. The phone comes with HarmonyOS 3.1 operating system.
In China, the Huawei P60 has been launched at CNY 4,488 (Rs. 54,000 approximately) for the 128GB variant, while the 256GB and 512GB variants have been priced at CNY 4,988 (Rs. 60,000 approximately) and 4.90,000 rubles (4.90,000 CNY). . respectively. 2000. Available in Emerald Green, Feather Black, Feather Purple and Rococo White (Chinese translation).
Bhupendra Singh Chundawat is a seasoned technology journalist with over 22 years of experience in the media industry. He specializes in covering the global technology landscape, with a deep focus on manufacturing trends and the geopolitical impact on tech companies. Currently serving as the Editor at Udaipur Kiran, his insights are shaped by decades of hands-on reporting and editorial leadership in the fast-evolving world of technology.




