Camera - Daylight Evaluation

The main selling point of the Pixel 3a phones is that they offer the very same rear camera and shooting experience as the more expensive flagship sibling. The differences between the two phones are non-existent in terms of the camera module, however we do see a larger difference in terms of the supporting internal hardware. One obvious big change is that the 3a phones do not feature Google’s Pixel Visual Core. Although functionally the PVC doesn’t offer anything that the SoC’s own DSP isn’t capable of, it would have been able to accelerate the processing. However this shouldn’t really be much of a concern on mid-range devices as it’s a good compromise to make in terms of achieving the same pictures quality.

We’ve reviewed the Pixel 3 camera last year and went more in-depth into the camera performance back then. Ever since there’s been a lot of new devices on the market – so although Google still claims the Pixel 3a to be able to compete at the flagship level, how does this still compare to what’s out there from the competition?

Click for full image
[ Pixel 3 ] - [ Pixel 3a ]
[ OnePlus 7 Pro ] - [ OnePlus 6T ]
[ S10+ (E) ] - [ S10+ (S) ]
[ P30 Pro ] - [ Honor 20 Pro ]
[ G8 ] - [ Oppo Reno ] - [ iPhone XS ]

In the first scene we see only very minute differences to the Pixel 3. There’s a bit of a change in colour temperature and the 3a posts slight less saturated colours than the Pixel 3. Overall if you wouldn’t have the devices side-by-side you’d have a tough time to notice the differences.

In terms of detail, the phones are still leading. In terms of exposure Google continues to have large issues in terms of exposure, going for a much darker than actual rendition. The Pixel 3a is lacking any levels beyond 90% in reds and particularly the greens of this scene, even though it’s in broad sunlight. Dynamic range is also quite limited as the phone over-emphasises shadows that aren’t there.

Click for full image
[ Pixel 3a ]
[ OnePlus 7 Pro ] - [ OnePlus 6T ]
[ S10+ (E) ] - [ S10+ (S) ]
[ P30 Pro ] - [ Honor 20 Pro ]
[ G8 ] - [ Oppo Reno ] - [ iPhone XS ]

In the next scene again Google posts an acceptable result, however it’s again way too dark. Fortunately the processing doesn’t actually flatten highlights, meaning you can get an accurate and much better result by simply increasing the brightness of the picture after-the-fact.

Click for full image
[ Pixel 3 ] - [ Pixel 3a ]
[ OnePlus 7 Pro ] - [ OnePlus 6T ]
[ S10+ (E) ] - [ S10+ (S) ]
[ P30 Pro ]
[ Honor 20 Pro ] - [ G8 ]
[ Oppo Reno ] - [ iPhone XS ]

The next shot we see the 3a also differ from the 3: The 3a is using a 30% longer exposure at slightly higher ISO and thus does a bit better in preserving bright highlights. Interesting again is the slight difference in colour temperature, this time around I’d say the 3a has the better rendition. Details and textures are excellent on both phones. The image is again too dark but easily fixed with slight adjustments.

Click for full image
[ Pixel 3 ] - [ Pixel 3a ]
[ OnePlus 7 Pro ] - [ OnePlus 6T ]
[ S10+ (E) ] - [ S10+ (S) ]
[ P30 Pro ] - [ Honor 20 Pro ]
[ G8 ] - [ Oppo Reno ] - [ iPhone XS ]

Continuing on we again see very slight differences. The 3a’s exposure is 20% longer and does manage to capture a slightly more representative scene in broad sunlight. Dynamic range continues to be an issue as the shadows remain the worst among all the phones. This time around it’s very hard to recover information after-the-fact.

Click for full image
[ Pixel 3 ] - [ Pixel 3a ]
[ OnePlus 7 Pro ] - [ OnePlus 6T ]
[ S10+ (E) ] - [ S10+ (S) ]
[ P30 Pro ] - [ Honor 20 Pro ] - [ G8 ]
[ Oppo Reno ] - [ iPhone XS ]

Detail in the scene is excellent all-round, however again we’re lacking in dynamic range and overall too dark image.

Click for full image
[ Pixel 3 ] - [ Pixel 3a ]
[ OnePlus 7 Pro ] - [ OnePlus 6T ]
[ S10+ (E) ] - [ S10+ (S) ]
[ P30 Pro ] - [ Honor 20 Pro ]
[ G8 ] - [ Oppo Reno ] - [ iPhone XS ]

The phone’s detail remains excellent and preserves all textures accurately, however yet again we’re seeing a bit of a struggle in terms of dynamic range and exposure. In this case the camera is exposing for the highlights on the cloud, which ends up disadvantaging the whole rest of the scene. Again it’s possible to rectify this and get better results, but it needs manual work after the fact.

Daylight Camera Conclusion

Whilst we found some very small differences between the Pixel 3 and the new 3a, the phone’s camera largely perform the exact same. In daylight pictures unfortunately this means some of my larger grievances with Google’s processing are still very much present in the Pixel 3a: Too dark pictures that aren’t representative of the scene and limited dynamic range that favour too much preserving highlights of bright scenes rather than keeping shadow detail.

The camera’s preservation of details however is excellent as it has among the best retention of textures of a lot of phones: Here Google just avoids any stupid smudging noise reduction algorithms as it’s simply not needed.

The thing is, the Pixel 3a isn’t really a flagship phone so our comparison here isn’t quite as fair. Yes Google does proclaim it has the same flagship camera, but I was never really of the opinion that the camera was all that good, particularly in daylight. Compared to what’s actually achieved by other devices in the same price-range, the Pixel 3a does offer excellent camera quality, although it’ll actually have tough competition from some phones from Asian vendors.

Battery Life - Great Camera - Low Light Evaluation
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  • UtilityMax - Thursday, August 1, 2019 - link

    The low Best Buy prices are for those who are activating a new carrier line. Without activation, the S8 is 500USD, and S9 is 600.

    I'll take a 400 Pixel 3A easy. Besides price, no round edges is a great win.
  • Alistair - Thursday, June 27, 2019 - link

    My nephew trashed the babysitter's phone and needed to buy a new one recently. I really wanted to buy a Pixel 3A, but it is absolutely trashed by the value of the A50 from Samsung imo. $375 vs $550 in Canada.
  • Stormbolter - Thursday, June 27, 2019 - link

    I would like to point that for the rest of the world, Google offers a clean Android Experience that Xiaomi, Huawei or Honor don't offer on the same price range - although Xiaomi, Nokia and Motorola do offer Android One devices, these are lower end, with worse camera and screen.

    And that the price difference fails to include VAT. Pixel 3a retails for 399/479€ in Spain. The Mi9 retails for ~449€ in the amazon marketplace, but stores (and phone providers) sell it for about 499€. Of course, if you're willing to forego warranty and such, you can import the phone for less, but then... so can someone living in USA (as long as they stick to GSM providers).

    Finally, Chinese flagships have all but done away with the phone jack, and middle class offerings tend to be lacking the good camera and screen flagships have.

    So, Pixel 3a /3a XL is a good option if you want a clean Android Experience, with a decent camera and screen, at a reasonable price.
  • Andrei Frumusanu - Thursday, June 27, 2019 - link

    The Mi9 is 393€, VAT included, directly from Xiaomi on Amazon.de
  • eastcoast_pete - Thursday, June 27, 2019 - link

    Xiaomi phones like the Mi9 can also be had in the US (Amazon and other online retailers). A possible alternative if one sticks to the GSM-based carriers (AT&T, T-MOBILE). However, make sure at least some of the LTE channels are covered by the modem.
  • RSAUser - Thursday, June 27, 2019 - link

    The Nokia devices are definitely not lower end.
    The Nokia 8.1 has a better SoC, which is clocked higher plus HDR support for camera, with a slightly worse battery but the SoC is more power efficient and also has a Google Camera port. It delivers all of that at about 350 EUR inc. of taxes, but sadly not available in the U.S. for you folk.
  • voicequal - Thursday, June 27, 2019 - link

    The headphone jack brought me to the Pixel 3a. It's been great so far. Now if dedicated home and back buttons would make a comeback, UI productivity would be back up to where it was on my first Android phone.
  • imaheadcase - Thursday, June 27, 2019 - link

    No idea why "reviews" post how a phone looks or is "prone to scratches". Everyone uses a case anyway with a phone. You see many car reviews about them worry about scratches on them? Nope, its about the insides and engines.

    Just stop with the headphone jack nonsense, its not a big deal at all. Every test shows people can't tell a different sound wise vs wired with a phone. I've yet to find anyone in real world who cares. Hell most people prefer bluetooth over wired anyway for workout, running, work, etc.
  • Ratman6161 - Thursday, June 27, 2019 - link

    Have to agree on the looks of a phone. My beautiful blue S9+ had a black plastic case on it before I even left the store. Its too darned expensive to take a chance on using it case-less.

    On the headphone jack...thats another matter. I have a set of blue tooth headphones (used with a TV set, not my S9). Sound quality is fine for my purpose. The problem is that they have a battery. So yet another thing that needs to be kept charged. Workout + running? Why would I want to run with a big honking phone strapped to my arm? For that I need something simple and cheap which is why I'm using my trusty old SanDisk MP3 player.
  • Inteli - Thursday, June 27, 2019 - link

    I'm so glad you're here to tell all us plebians what we need and what we don't need. Of course nobody needs wired headphones! We also don't need anything above 128kbps MP3s. You're lying if you say you can hear a difference. You also don't need a car. Everybody in the city gets by fine without them! Your opinion is obviously the only one that matters and every reviewer should cater to exclusively what you think is important.

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