Camera - Recap

In terms of camera evaluation, I’ll refer to our recent more extensive camera review and device overview from a few weeks ago which also contained the Mi 11 Ultra:

What really make the Mi 11 Ultra special over other devices in the market is that although it’s only a three-module hardware setup, Xiaomi takes advantage of the quad-Bayer dual-resolution capabilities of its sensors to add in additional “virtual” focal lengths that still are able to resolve high quality 12MP captures. In that sense, the Mi 11 Ultra essentially has 13, 23, 46, 119 and 238mm “native”-level quality focal lengths, and these are highly performant modules and camera sensors at each focal length.

Click for full image
 Axon 30 Ultra      
Mi 11 Ultra       Mi 11      ]
[ S21U(S) ] [ S21U(E) ]
[ OnePlus 9 Pro ]
[ S21(E) ] [ iPhone 12 Pro ] [ Pixel 5 ]
X-T30 (     ) (       ) ]

The Mi 11 Ultra’s 10x shot, in terms of detail retention, it’s notable that this should be a crop out of the sensor’s native 48MP mode, as it’s much better quality than a scaled up 12MP result from a 5x magnification. The Mi 11 Ultra definitely doesn’t do well in textures – I’m not sure if this is a result of the processing or a result of the lower colour resolution due to the quad-Bayer colour filter which does come into play here at the phone’s 48MP sensor capture mode. It also can be a result of the dynamic range of the pixels due to it working with 0.8µm pixels versus the S21 Ultra’s 1.22µm pixels. What’s clear though is that the overall image is too dark, with the shadows being unnaturally pronounced.

The phone does extremely well in resolution, however the exposure and HDR is quite bad, with the histogram of the picture being empty in the last 15% of intensity levels, just being underexposed or just wrongly processed.

Click for full image
Axon 30 Ultra    
Mi 11 Ultra    ]  Mi 11    ]
[ S21U(S) ] [ S21U(E) ]
[ OnePlus 9 Pro ] 
[ S21(E) ] [ iPhone 12 Pro ] [ Pixel 5 ]
X-T30 (     ) ]

In Ultra-Wide shots, technically, the Mi 11 Ultra should be at the top, but is hampered by bad optics and not too great HDR which doesn’t recover as much dynamic range as many other competitor processing algorithms. The blurred optics on the edges of the ultra-wide module unfortunately would be a hardware characteristic and not something which could be fixed or improved upon in firmware.

Click for full image
Axon 30 Ultra    -    
Mi 11 Ultra    -    ]  Mi 11    -   ]
S21(E)    -    ]
[ S21U(S)  -  ] [ S21U(E)  -  ]
[ OnePlus 9 Pro  -  ] 
[ iPhone 12 Pro ] [ Pixel 5  -  ]
X-T30 (   ) ]

In low-light, the Mi 11 Ultra’s giant sensor is what allows it to perform outstandingly well compared to pretty much any other phone out there. Xiaomi also has an adequate night mode which further improves shadow details in dim light.

Overall Camera Conclusion

Generally, the Mi 11 Ultra is definitely one of the strongest camera solutions out there today. The hardware setup, even though it’s “only” a 3-camera solution, smartly takes advantage of the quad-Bayer sensors, effectively turning the system into a “virtual” 5-camera setup, bar a quality gap from around 70-120mm.

The huge new 1/1.12” main sensor allows for extremely good retention of natural details – well actually, all the sensors have this common characteristic as Xiaomi seems to employ an extremely light touch (or even none) when it comes to postprocessing here, which is great.

The only one negative I would say is that its HDR processing isn’t quite as capable in recovering information as some of the competition’s implementations, so I found the phone is maybe too conservative there and doesn’t pull out the full capabilities that the hardware is capable of. This is especially valid for the periscope telephoto – while technically excellent, the image processing here in terms of exposure metering and HDR leaves things to be desired.

In low-light, the phone is a top-performer, but isn’t totally consistent in its ultra-wide. As I mention the UWA – the optics quality on this module isn’t quite satisfactory on the outer frame, and performs notably below that of other devices.

Battery Life - Only Average Conclusion & End Remarks
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  • DougMcC - Wednesday, July 21, 2021 - link

    ^This. 99+% of people don't want to carry a camera with them, but don't have much of a choice in terms of must-carry a phone these days. That it comes with a camera is a nice bonus, and essentially means that for all those people taking more than good enough pictures is a freebie.
  • Oxford Guy - Wednesday, July 21, 2021 - link

    argumentum ad populum
  • The Garden Variety - Thursday, July 22, 2021 - link

    Don’t be an insufferable ponce.
  • Oxford Guy - Monday, July 26, 2021 - link

    Generic ad hom isn’t an upgrade from ad populum.
  • pjc15 - Friday, July 30, 2021 - link

    Ad populum isn't relevant when you're deciding how to make a product you want lots of people to buy.
  • yetanotherhuman - Tuesday, July 27, 2021 - link

    You might feel like it, but you're not the only one.
    Spec chasing is also something that bores me too. Let's keep the gimmicks and cost to a minimum.
  • Nar - Wednesday, July 21, 2021 - link

    Have you been able to source a global version of the ultra?
  • Samus - Wednesday, July 21, 2021 - link

    Xiaomi is pretty damn bold thinking they can charge $1400 for a pretty flawed phone. I mean come on those are straight up Apple prices, and while this has a lot going for it (Apple is off my list until they bring back a simple fingerprint sensor) it's battery life sucks to be daily driven without charging and it's performance sucks because it overheats and throttles in games.

    I think the headline hit the nail on the head, with a battery that large, how is this phone so inefficient to score iPhone 12 Mini-levels of battery life?
  • yetanotherhuman - Wednesday, July 21, 2021 - link

    the headline should be "fast, but big and ineffcient". I'm sick of huge phones.
  • gz-0 - Wednesday, July 21, 2021 - link

    As usual, the reviews only cover OEM software. Experienced users know that the best software is made by software experts, not by hardware manufacturers. Android is different from Apple. Android allows the software experts to control hardware better than any other product.
    Generally on all our Android devices, we use the same very high quality software. Microsoft Launcher (or Nova), Gboard keyboard, & Open Camera.
    Hardware should not be judged on incompetent software, or incompetent beginner users. That's similar to car testing, using factory fluids, and novice drivers on city only roads.

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