Camera - Low Light Evaluation

Low-light photography of the ROG Phone III is a wildcard. On one hand, the phone lacks OIS which is a big detriment to low-light photography, but on the other hand, the device has a potent sensor, wide aperture, and now also features a night mode that might be able to still produce good images.

Click for full image
[ ROG Phone III ]
[iPhone 11 Pro ] - [Galaxy S20+(E) ]
[ Pixel 4 ] - [ X-T30 ]

As expected, the non-night mode shots of the phone are quite disappointing and are considerably worse than the competition.

The ultra-wide here is also night unusable and in the same bottom-tier as the iPhone 11’s unit.

When turning on night mode however, which by the way is triggered to come on by default when under low-light conditions, there’s a dramatic improvement in quality and it becomes usable, although it still can’t compete with other phones which have OIS.

Click for full image
[ ROG Phone III ]
[ iPhone 11 Pro ] - [ Galaxy S20+(E) ]
[ Pixel 4 ] - [ X-T30 ]

I did like the ROG3’s exposure here as it was the most realistic of the bunch, however it lacked the higher dynamic range in the shadows of other phones.

Click for full image
[ ROG Phone III ]
[ iPhone 11 Pro ] - [ Galaxy S20+(E) ]
[ Pixel 4 ] - [ X-T30 ]

In brighter scenes, the ROG3 does ok, but the lack of OIS shows in the lack of detail, and the shot just has worse dynamic range than the competition, although it remains quite usable.

Click for full image
[ ROG Phone III ]
[ iPhone 11 Pro ] - [ Galaxy S20+(E) ]
[ Pixel 4 ] - [ X-T30 ]

Surprisingly enough this scene was to the liking of the ASUS as it produced an excellent result that although it a bit bright, has tone of good retention of textures and detail and is quite ahead of all other mobile phones.

Click for full image
[ ROG Phone III ]
[ iPhone 11 Pro ] - [ Galaxy S20+(E) ]
[ Pixel 4 ] - [ X-T30 ]

The darker the scene, the worse the ROG3 fares as its shutter speed can’t go as low as other phones. The S20 is able to get double the amount of light at 1/8th a second over 1/20th of the ASUS, and the iPhone ½ second exposure really shines.

Click for full image
[ ROG Phone III ]
[ iPhone 11 Pro ] - [ Galaxy S20+(E) ]
[ Pixel 4 ] - [ X-T30 ]

And in the last shot again, the much slower shutter speeds of the ROG3 mean that it captures a lot less light than the competition.

Overall Low-Light Evaluation: Meh

Generally, the ROG Phone III just suffers greatly from the lack of OIS. Although its night mode seems to perform quite adequately and be competitive in terms of computational photography, the fact that its shutter speeds are always around four times faster than the competition means that it’s only able to capture about a quarter of the light. It’s very clearly a tier below other flagship devices, and generally not competitive.

Camera - Daylight Evaluation Video Recording & Speaker Evaluation
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  • s.yu - Monday, August 31, 2020 - link

    iPhone batteries are still small for their screen size, while iPad batteries are not.
  • Great_Scott - Monday, August 31, 2020 - link

    Forget using the phone for games. I'd lock the screen to 60Hz and charge it every other day (every 3rd day?).
  • flyingpants265 - Tuesday, September 1, 2020 - link

    Yeah, the display thing is dumb. Remember when people said over 1080p was a waste for phones? Well.... They were right. And here we go again with the display thing.
  • Kishoreshack - Friday, August 28, 2020 - link

    Always felt Snapdragon Plus versions were a gimmick
    This review proves it
    The plus versions suck a lot of power
  • s.yu - Monday, August 31, 2020 - link

    Not really, it's pretty clear that last year's ROGP2 with 855+ was a notch above the regular 855. Either Asus made a mistake here or 865 doesn't scale as well.
  • Spunjji - Tuesday, September 1, 2020 - link

    Pretty sure it's the fault of the 856+ - they just pushed it further than it really needs to go.
  • Kishoreshack - Friday, August 28, 2020 - link

    Want Anandtech to do more phone reviews
    Many devices are pending
  • Quantumz0d - Friday, August 28, 2020 - link

    No 3.5mm jack and no SD card slot is a joke on this. Not interested at all, It's just a chastity block with zero freedom.
  • ads295 - Friday, August 28, 2020 - link

    Agreed, this is one device where even ASUS agreed that size doesn't matter. Such a dumb decision
  • Tchamber - Friday, August 28, 2020 - link

    I hear this a lot, no 3.5 jack means no buy. I love good music, with quality sound, but when I'm on my phone I have given in to the convenience of Bluetooth. And I've been impressed with the audio fidelity some headphones deliver. I have two sets right now, LG Tones, which are really comfortable, and Beats PowerBeats3, which sound amazing, and even deliver nice bass. So I'm wondering, when was the last time you tried Bluetooth? Not to say wireless headphones are as good as wired, but there are some really good options.

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