![]() Landscapes look great on both phones, but the Pixel appears to have the upper hand. Take a look at the results for yourself, which one do you think won our shootout? Landscape Odd, because when you look at them indoors, the shots appear brighter on the Pixel’s 2K AMOLED display. This would likely only bother you when shooting in direct sunlight, but it seems like the iPhone has a brighter screen than its predecessors which keeps glare down to a minimum in direct sunlight. The first thing I noticed while shooting outdoors was how hard it was to see through the screen of the Pixel - even with the maximum brightness, I had a hard time previewing my shot. The wider lens on the Pixel makes the shot appear farther away than on the iPhone. Auto HDR was left enabled (the default) and no other camera settings were changed (save for Portrait mode - we’ll get to that later). ![]() ![]() That’s because the Pixel has a slightly wider-angle lens than the iPhone, which means shots look as if they were taken from farther away on Google’s phone despite having been taken from the exact same position.Īnd while it looks like Google used editing apps in its Pixel sample photos, we decided to keep them RAW, so you can see what they look like before being tweaked. The first thing you might notice in this comparison is that the crop on the iPhone is significantly smaller than the Pixel.
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