Following a Chinese launch, Vivo has confirmed the X300 Ultra for international markets, bringing a three-lens ZEISS system and professional video capabilities to global buyers for the first time at the brand’s Ultra tier.
The camera hardware marks the clearest departure from conventional flagship design, with Vivo equipping the X300 Ultra with three prime lenses rather than the single dominant sensor and pair of secondary cameras that define most high-end Android phones in 2026.
Each lens in the lineup targets a distinct focal length: a 35mm documentary camera built around the 200MP Sony LYTIA 901 sensor on a 1/1.12-inch frame, an 85mm periscope telephoto with a 200MP sensor and gimbal-grade optical stabilisation at f/2.67, and a 14mm ultra-wide with a 50MP LYTIA 818 sensor covering a 116-degree field of view with reduced edge distortion.
Extending the reach further, Vivo also offers two physical telephoto extenders for the X300 Ultra, with the top-tier Gen 2 Ultra model pushing the effective focal length to a 400mm equivalent for long-range photography that typically requires dedicated optical equipment.
It’s not just about photos…
On the video side, the X300 Ultra supports 4K 120fps recording across all three rear sensors, alongside 10-bit LOG video, Dolby Vision capture, and real-time LUT support, a combination that places it in direct competition with dedicated compact cinema cameras rather than just other smartphones.
Underpinning the camera system is a Snapdragon 8 Elite Gen 5 chipset paired with 16GB of RAM, storage options of 512GB or 1TB, and a 6,000mAh battery with 100W wired and 40W wireless charging, housed in an IP69-rated chassis with a 6.82-inch QHD+ LTPO OLED display.
The X300 Ultra runs OriginOS 6, based on Android 16, with Vivo committing to five years of OS updates and seven years of security patches for the device.
The X300 Ultra is currently listed for pre-order at Vivo’s official website ahead of its international rollout across Asia, Europe, Brazil, and several additional regions, though pricing has not been confirmed, and a UK release date remains unannounced.
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