![]() ![]() You just have to guess and pick which is which. However, the ultra-wide selfie and Dual-tone Spotlight feature were removed completely from the vivo V25. While it’s a mixed bag of outputs, it still depends on the user if Night Mode photos are important in a midranger or not.įor users who love taking selfies even in the dark, both phones can take fill-in flash (using the display) to brighten up your faces. Low-light photos can either make or break the capabilities of a smartphone’s camera. Lens coating was also cleaned several times but still resulted to the same output. *Left photo was taken multiple times with the focus tapped on the baked roll. Taking food shots (mostly with indoor lighting) is a better way to test which phone camera is capable of producing the better image output with the right amount of highlights, shadows, contrast, sharpness, temperature, as well as Dynamic Range. #S22 ULTRA ZOOM TEST ANDROID#In any given circumstance, a valuable Android midranger should take at least a decent photo with natural light around - thus me taking lesser photos to compare. Vivo V23 with the Dual-tone Spotlight Flash featureīut how do these phones perform side-by-side knowing the new V25 also has a slightly less-powerful MediaTek Dimensity 900 chipset over V23 5G’s Dimensity 920? Are there enough convincing differences or is the older model actually better? Feed yourself some photo sample comparisons below. #S22 ULTRA ZOOM TEST PRO#SEE ALSO: Huawei P50 Pro vs Samsung Galaxy S21 FE: Camera shootout While my P50 Pro vs Galaxy S21 FE camera shootout looks more comprehensive with 60 photo sets, being able to show half in this camera comparison article still proves a point that the Huawei P50 Pro can keep up with Samsung’s latest and greatest smartphone yet. The difference in optical zoom lenses was also evident.īut in some shooting scenarios, the Galaxy S22 Ultra won especially when it comes to processing HDR (High Dynamic Range), sharpness and details, as well as overall exposure and contrast in most wide and zoomed shots.Īnd just like in my P50 Pro review, the AWB (Auto White Balance) when using Night Mode (or shooting in low-light for that matter) leans more into the warmer range of the spectrum whereas the Galaxy S22 Ultra is more on the cooler (or maybe neutral) one. ![]() If we’re looking at the specifics, the Galaxy S22 Ultra has a wider main camera whereas the P50 Pro has a wider ultra-wide camera. Samsung’s Galaxy S22 Ultra may have the better camera hardware out of the two, but it doesn’t mean that the P50 Pro is a slouch when it comes to camera performance.Īs a matter of fact, it was able to keep up from day ’til night. Which are your top photo picks? It may already be obvious to some of you at the beginning but here are the results:ĭespite Huawei not making the P50 Pro+ variant, it’s still safe to say that this camera shootout between the top-tier flagship phones of each brand is still pretty close. The Galaxy S22 Ultra has a dedicated 10x telephoto lens while the P50 Pro only relies on digital zoom and AI when zooming in on 10x. Unlike low-light photos taken using the Auto Mode, Night Mode is more suitable for making night shots pop with the right amount of highlights, shadows, and contrast altogether. Once the sunset is out, smartphones tend to change their AI algorithm in making low-light shots brighter but with less noise When shooting in Portrait Mode, one smartphone uses its 3x Telephoto Zoom lens while the other sticks with its 50MP wide camera. ![]() There’s a gap between the main cameras The S22 Ultra has a 108MP while the P50 Pro has a tad smaller 50MP camera - but both still having an f/1.8 aperture.Ĭan the smaller sensor keep up with the bigger one?įor a fair and square fight, I only used the first telephoto camera of the Galaxy S22 Ultra versus the Huawei P50 Pro’s sole zoom lens. The Galaxy S22 Ultra has a 13MP f/2.2 shooter while the P50 Pro has a 12MP UWA camera of the same aperture - albeit with difference in the overall focal length / angle. ![]() The Huawei P50 Pro may not be a direct rival to the Samsung Galaxy S22 Ultra in terms of camera hardware (that’s more the Galaxy S22+), but this is also a good chance to compare and see if Huawei’s latest flagship can keep up with the biggest brother in the whole Galaxy S22 lineup. ![]()
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |
AuthorWrite something about yourself. No need to be fancy, just an overview. ArchivesCategories |