
A new video leak has shown the vivo X Fold6 running an upgraded Atomic Workbench feature built for heavy foldable multitasking.
The demo, shared by the blogger V粉情报局, focuses on a redesigned workspace experience for vivo’s next foldable phone. The most eye-catching part is support for a serial mode that can mount up to five apps at the same time, with the apps remaining active rather than simply sitting in the background.
That kind of feature is important for foldables because the hardware promise is not just a bigger screen. The software has to make that bigger screen useful. A foldable that can keep several apps visible and responsive can work more like a small productivity tablet than a conventional smartphone.

The updated Atomic Workbench is also said to improve the display layout, giving the frontmost app a larger viewing area. That could make the feature easier to use in real situations where one main app needs attention while other apps stay available nearby.
Another major addition is a four-app split-screen mode. According to the leak, the vivo X Fold6 can open four apps on one screen and keep them running in parallel. Users can reportedly drag the center control point to adjust how much space each app receives.

The video also suggests a four-finger gesture can enlarge a single window for closer viewing. That matters because four-app layouts can become cramped even on foldable screens, so fast resizing is essential if vivo wants the feature to feel smooth instead of gimmicky.
For U.S. readers who follow foldables, this is another sign that Chinese phone makers are pushing software multitasking hard. Samsung has long emphasized multi-window tools on the Galaxy Z Fold line, while brands like vivo are trying to make large-screen Android feel more fluid, more flexible, and more AI-assisted.
The leak follows earlier real-world images of the vivo X Fold6. Those images showed a bright color option, a rounded overall body, and a circular rear camera module with ZEISS branding placed near the center of the camera area.

vivo has already scheduled the X Fold6 for a June launch. Company executive Huang Tao has said the device will introduce OriginOS 6 Fold, with upgrades centered on foldable large-screen use and AI productivity.
Those upgrades are expected to include the new Atomic Workbench, an AI assistant, dual-device companion features, on-device AI capabilities, and broader improvements to AI interaction. The goal appears to be making the foldable screen useful for work, communication, and content handling instead of relying only on hardware novelty.
As always, leaked demonstrations should be treated with caution until vivo officially confirms the final software behavior. But if the feature launches as shown, the X Fold6 could become one of the more interesting examples of foldable multitasking in 2026.