And the Note 20 Ultra can go much further than this, all the way out to 50x. The wood sign looks a lot blurrier on the iPhone 12 Pro’s shot, as does the grass and garbage can in the background. Check out the difference with both phones set to 10x digital zoom. You get only 2x optical zoom, compared to 5x for the Note 20 Ultra. The iPhone 12 Pro does have a camera weakness, and that’s zoom. The Galaxy Note 20 Ultra muddies those details and my face looks overly bright and smooth. Check out the detail in my brown jacket you can make out fine stitching even from a distance, which is Apple’s Magic Fusion at work. I was very impressed with how well the iPhone 12 Pro performed in this portrait. Samsung’s picture is overly bright in the leaves toward the top of the frame and blows out the sky a bit, while the iPhone 12 Pro delivers a deeper blue in the sky and more contrast overall. The iPhone 12 Pro also outperformed the Galaxy Note 20 Ultra when we tested both cameras at a nearby park. The iPhone 12 Pro brings out more details in the pumpkins and especially in the flower petals, resulting in a sharper and brighter image. Take this shot of some mums and pumpkins on a bench, photographed at daytime in the shadows. I took a bunch of photos compared to the Galaxy Note 20 Ultra, and the iPhone 12 Pro won nearly every round. Other highlights include Night Mode for the Ultra Wide and TrueDepth (front) cameras, Deep Fusion on every camera for better detail and Smart HDR 3 for getting the best results in tricky lightning conditions. The iPhone 12 Pro’s photography capabilities are so impressive that it’s almost an insult to call it a camera phone. Although the 12MP resolution remains the same on the wide, ultra-wide and telephoto lenses, there are a ton of upgrades here, starting with a faster f/1.6 aperture for the main camera, which results in 27% improved low-light performance.
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