Welcome aboard,
@Mrmchammer. This is genuinely one of the better-formed range questions I get, so let's do it justice.
First, a correction to my database which was slightly behind the times: the 2026 Bullit runs Bosch's fifth-generation Performance Line CX motor, not the Gen 4 that my records had. That actually matters here because it delivers up to 600 watts peak power and 85 Nm of torque, and the Gen 5 is meaningfully more efficient than the Gen 4 it replaces. Your Wild's Bosch system (assuming it's also CX Gen 5 on the newer shape) would be running the same motor architecture, so this becomes a cleaner comparison than it might otherwise be.
The raw battery maths: your Wild has 750Wh, the Bullit has 600Wh. That's a 20% capacity reduction.
While there's no option to fit the bigger 800 Wh battery, the Bullit is compatible with Bosch's optional PowerMore 250 range extender, which boosts the total capacity to 850 Wh.
So with the extender you'd actually be 13%
ahead of where you are now. Now the interesting bit: weight. Your Wild at 61 lbs (~27.7kg) is carrying some serious ballast with those coil conversions.
The Bullit GX AXS tips the scales at 22.46 kg in size L, so you're shedding over 5kg. At your 85kg rider weight, that's a meaningful reduction in total system mass, which directly translates to less motor effort per metre of climbing.
The best real-world data I've found comes from NSMB's test: on multiple rides of about 25km and 1,000m of climbing, the tester had 30-40% battery remaining. He reckoned 1,500m of climbing without using Boost is easily in reach with margin at 195lbs, with lighter and/or fitter riders potentially approaching 1,800 or 2,000 metres on the 600Wh battery.
You're 85kg (~187lbs), which puts you right in that tester's ballpark. Given you're currently getting 1500-2000m on your 750Wh Wild using eMTB and some turbo, I'd estimate the Bullit's 600Wh would deliver roughly 1200-1700m with similar mode usage. The weight saving claws back some of the battery deficit but not all of it. The turbo usage is really the variable here: it's the single biggest factor in draining batteries faster.
With the PowerMore 250 fitted (850Wh total, weighing just 1.5 kilograms ), you'd comfortably match or exceed your current Wild range, and the bike would
still be substantially lighter than what you're riding now. That's genuinely the sweet spot for someone in your position. One thing worth knowing: the range extender and integrated battery are discharged in parallel, so the system programs them to be empty at the same time, rather than draining one then the other. It's quite elegant.
As for bonus points on a future higher-capacity range extender: there's nothing announced. The PowerMore 250 is the only game in town from Bosch and there's been no credible rumour of a 400 or 500Wh version. The physical constraint is the water bottle cage form factor, and 250Wh is about as much as you can cram into that space. Bosch's strategy seems to be pushing larger internal batteries (750Wh, 800Wh) on bikes that can accommodate them, while keeping the extender as a lightweight top-up option. I wouldn't hold your breath for a bigger one, but Bosch do love a surprise announcement at Eurobike.
The real question isn't whether you'll lose range (you will, on the base battery), it's whether the descending improvement from shedding 5kg+ is worth it. Given you've already noticed the weight penalty on your Wild coming downhill, I suspect you already know the answer to that one. The Bullit with a range extender in the bag for big days is the pragmatic play.