Today's
Indian launch of the Infinix Note 60 Pro carries one detail that's been oddly underreported: this isn't just a Qualcomm first for the brand. It also has a secondary display on the back.
Summary
- The Infinix Note 60 Pro launches in India on April 13 via Flipkart, marking the brand's first smartphone powered by a Qualcomm Snapdragon chipset — specifically the Snapdragon 7s Gen 4 built on a 4nm process.
- The phone features a 6.78-inch 1.5K AMOLED display with 144Hz refresh rate, 4,500 nits peak brightness, Gorilla Glass 7i, and JBL-tuned dual stereo speakers.
- A 6,500mAh battery with 90W wired and 30W wireless charging is housed in a chassis just 7.4mm thin — a notably thin profile for this battery capacity.
- The headline design feature not mentioned in the input: an Active Matrix rear LED display that handles notifications, animations, and themed visuals — including a Call of Duty Mobile Ghost-themed special edition tied to an Activision certification for 120fps CODM gameplay.
- Pre-booking offers include no-cost EMI up to 12 months, up to Rs 3,000 bank discount, a free MagPower speaker worth Rs 3,999, one year of free screen replacement, 18 months of free Google Gemini Pro, 5,000GB of Jio cloud storage, and a 1+1 year warranty.
Infinix has spent years building its India presence on MediaTek-powered value devices. Switching to Qualcomm for the Note 60 Pro isn't just a chipset decision — it's a statement about where the brand thinks it belongs in the mid-range hierarchy.
What the Snapdragon 7s Gen 4 Actually Means Here
The
Snapdragon 7s Gen 4 is a 4nm chip with clock speeds up to 2.7GHz and an
AnTuTu score crossing the one million mark. That positions it meaningfully above the MediaTek Dimensity 7300 territory that characterizes most Infinix releases, and into territory occupied by devices like the Poco X8 Pro and Realme 13 Pro. The Activision certification for 120fps CODM gameplay adds third-party validation to the performance claims — which is a smarter move than relying solely on first-party benchmarks. The IceCore 3D vapor chamber cooling supports sustained performance under load, which matters when the 120fps claim needs to hold across a full gaming session.
The Active Matrix Rear Display Nobody Is Talking About
Here's the feature the India teaser campaign hasn't emphasized enough: the Active Matrix rear LED display. This is a secondary display panel on the back of the phone, similar in concept to Nothing's
Glyph Matrix. It handles notifications, animations, and themed visual customizations. The Ghost-themed COD Mobile edition takes this further with specific character visuals tied to in-game themes. It's the kind of design differentiation that separates the Note 60 Pro from virtually every other phone in this segment — and frankly, it should be the headline.
Battery and Camera, Honestly Assessed
Six thousand five hundred milliamps with 90W wired charging is genuinely strong. The 7.4mm chassis at this battery capacity is an engineering accomplishment worth acknowledging. Wireless charging at 30W — typically a feature reserved for flagships in India's mid-range — adds practical flexibility. I suppose the 50MP main camera with OIS alongside an 8MP ultrawide is competent for casual photography rather than enthusiast shooting, but at this price point that's the right trade-off.
The three years of OS upgrades and five years of security patches round out a package that's clearly trying to justify a premium positioning within the sub-Rs 30,000 bracket.