Camera - Recap

The camera setup of the Axon 30 Ultra is quite peculiar and special, in that it doesn’t really match anything else in the market right now. As with the other recent reviews, we dove deeper into the phone’s camera several weeks ago in our much more extensive flagship camera review article, so for a lot more samples and discussion, I’d recommend reading that piece:

The one thing that makes the Axon 30 Ultra quite weird from other phones is the fact that it has a secondary wide-angle lens with a focal range of 31mm – just a little bit longer than the 26mm equivalent “main” camera sensor. ZTE calls this module a “portrait” lens, although it really doesn’t have the equivalent focal range of a typical portrait lens at >50mm.

Except for the 8MP telephoto module, all other modules on the Axon 30 Ultra are 64MP quad-Bayer units that bin down to 16MP, so it’s actually generally a little above the normal 12MP results you’d see from contemporary phones.

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 our full camera review article, the one thing that stood our about the Axon 30 Ultra is that the phone’s camera processing is punching quite above its weight compared to many other flagship devices in the market, resulting in quite natural looking tone curves through most scenarios.

The phone’s telephoto module which has a 5x optical module at a 123mm equivalent focal length allows for quite competitive zoomed in shots, notably higher quality than any other phone that doesn’t have a periscope optics camera setup. While it doesn’t compete with the much larger S20/S21 Ultra or the Mi 11 Ultra’s models, it offers something that’s above the norm.

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 terms of HDR, although the camera does have a hardware disadvantage due to the higher resolution, ZTE’s processing was most of the time able to get quite good results. While never being the best, it tended always to get colour temperature right and keep a more lifelike representation of shadows and highlights. The one weakness that tends to creep in is that the phone sometimes feels a little washed out and lacking in colour saturation.

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 scenarios, the Axon 30 Ultra’s sensor struggle quite a bit, but the phone does have a night mode that is able to recover light. While the phone’s cameras are usable in this mode, the processing tends very much flatten out textures completely which represents the phone biggest weakness in low-light. Because of this, it’s only really an average performer.

Overall Camera Conclusion

The ZTE Axon 30 Ultra was actually a quite surprising camera experience for me because the device had a unique type of processing in daylight shots that appeared extremely natural and most of the time very much competitive with a lot of the flagship cameras out there in the market. While texture details weren’t always great, colour accuracy and HDR tone mapping was generally great, which is quite weird as that’s always the aspects that are the hardest to get right in a camera system.

In low-light, the phone isn’t quite as competitive as the night mode processing literally falls flat in terms of textures, I hope ZTE can somehow improve the algorithm and achieve better results in the future.

Hardware-wise, it’s a very versatile shooter, however as much as ZTE tries to rationalise the secondary 31mm camera module, the practical uses just aren’t there – the main camera module has a much superior sensor and OIS, and the focal range difference is so minor that I wish this module just weren’t there at all.

Overall, the Axon 30 Ultra is a surprisingly capable shooter. While it’s definitely not at the levels of the best of what we see from the competition, it has aspects where it can very much hold its own weight, and results in a very usable camera experience in this price segment.

Battery Life - Mediocre Conclusion & End Remarks
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  • ottonis - Sunday, August 1, 2021 - link

    The rules of market are fairly agnostic with regards to what customers "accept" and what they don't.
    As long as a company can sell good amounts of phones and even increase their margins, they will cut literally everything from the phone.
    The point is: what will the consumer purchase? The mere fact that Apple Google etc are cutting away SD slots and abalogie audio ports means that a sufficient number of customers purchase these products, even at a premium price.
    So, best thing to do is simply to ignore such devices and focus on comanies/brands/device models that still incorporate these components into devices.
    The Sony Xperia 1/5/10 Mark III come to mind as great alternatives, although in my opinion they are quite overpriced for what they offer especially in the camera department.

    The Xiaomi Pico X3 pro has a 3.5mm jack, an SD card slot, a fairly ok-ish main rear camera, is available on Amazon even in the US and costs only 280 bucks.
    I am seriously considering on giving up on so called "flagships" and instead run a cheap bread and butter smartphone that does everything I need and want, and if I plan on shooting some good photos just carry around an ultra pocketable mini camera such as Canon Gx7iii or one of the Sony Rx100 models, all if which easily fit into a jeans pocket.
  • drajitshnew - Friday, July 30, 2021 - link

    Consumers have to accept that micro SD cards are dying out. The newer micro SD express standard has been out for some time, has connectors available from at least amphenol, and has support from WD. But not even Sony Xperia supports it. There is nothing we can do about it.
    As for the 3.5 mm Jack, it actually provides SUPERIOR audio quality than USB -C Analog audio (the dongle type) because the Analog signal is transmitted by pins in close proximity to those carrying high frequency and high power signals. And if the signal is being output like that it is actually misleading to call it a 32 bit 192KHz audio, or something similar.
    But as I said I seriously am starting to think that I made a mistake in buying a fringe model with a 3.5mm audio but botched call management.
  • drajitshnew - Friday, July 30, 2021 - link

    The hyped audio advantages of USB-C only come into play if you output digital audio to an external high quality DAC. But that adds bulk and COST disadvantages. Also, most midrange phones have USB 2.0
  • flyingpants265 - Friday, July 30, 2021 - link

    Hard to beat the Poco X3 Pro for the price...
  • BillyBeane - Friday, July 30, 2021 - link

    Will be compatible with any US carriers after the 2g/3g shutdown? Does it do VoLTE? What Frequency bands is it compatible with?
  • docola - Friday, July 30, 2021 - link

    It's a deal killer for ANY phone that is chinese for me.
    Xiaomi etc has confirmed our suspicions when all kinds of data
    was found to be sent to odd russian and chinese servers.
    Too bad because they make great phones (xiaomi) at cheap prices.
    Its selling your soul to the spy devils. No thank you.
  • flyingpants265 - Saturday, July 31, 2021 - link

    Xiaomis are basically sold at cost. For $270 USD or whatever for the pro model, you can't really go wrong! That's cheaper than the old Nexus 4, Nexus 5, OnePlus One. Half the price of a Samsung Galaxy S3 on release.

    I'm flashing AOSP on mine. But of course that wouldn't change anything that might be contained inside the chips.
  • drajitshnew - Friday, July 30, 2021 - link

    Kudos to @Andrei for b introducing browser based web benchmarks. The blacklisting and whitelisting shenanigans are seriously impairing the utility of PC mark.
    @dotjaz recently got a fresh perspective on the utility of software updates. Realme x7max [? Realme GT 5G] got bricked twice, before they figured that it was being caused by a software update. I was also advised and did a factory reset [unsuccessful] because my calls don't appear on the screen -- seriously.
    As a reference Microsoft has done an absolutely amazing job with the technology and support in Windows 10. But it has got more brickbats for BSODs and bricking from them same updates.
  • flyingpants265 - Saturday, July 31, 2021 - link

    What on earth? Windows 10 is one of the worst pieces of software ever made.
  • nicolaim - Friday, July 30, 2021 - link

    No good software update policy?
    No wireless charging?
    LOL

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