Conclusion & End Remarks

We’ve had the new iPhones for a few weeks now, admittedly pushing out this review in favour of coverage of Apple’s newest Apple Silicon M1 devices. As I’m finally finishing up this iPhone review, the one feeling I have is that I’m not all too excited for this new generation of phones, with several factors coming into play.

First of all, design-wise, the new iPhone 12 series are definitely a breath of fresh air for Apple’s device line-up. Finally dropping the industrial design look that was adopted 3 years ago by the iPhone X, the new iPhone 12’s design is a mix of the old and new. There’s undoubtedly homage to the iPhone 4 and 5 era which featured also featured flat metal frames in their design, and it does make the iPhone 12 series stand out versus any other phone today.

Whilst design and looks are one side of the coin, the other side is actual usability and ergonomics. In this regard, I’m just not a very big fan of Apple’s choices here as I outright feel the iPhone 12s are a step backwards compared to the iPhone 11 series. Although the width of the phones isn’t any larger on the new models, they just feel noticeably bigger in the hand due to the right-angle frame edges. I ask myself as what exactly was the reason in the first place that over the years, we transitioned to rounded phones, with various vendors investing into curved front and back glass devices, if it was not for the benefit of better ergonomics, and for the devices to fit better in our fleshy meat hands. I mean, what’s the point in making the new iPhones thinner, and lose out on battery capacity, if they don’t actually feel thinner in the hand? I know it’s a very subjective topic and people might not have the same strong opinion, but even after a few weeks I still prefer to go back to an iPhone 11 Pro because of the more natural ergonomics.

Build-quality wise, the new iPhones are great and feel extremely solid. I prefer the aluminium iPhone 12 over the steel 12 Pro due to it not collecting fingerprints and actually being much lighter, although the frosted matte glass back panel of the 12 Pro definitely has the much better feeling finish.

The displays of the iPhone 12’s are good, with the Pro devices having the better quality displays of the series, having a higher brightness and better viewing angles, although the practical differences between the two models aren’t all that great.

The fact that both the iPhone 12 and 12 Pro have the same resolution OLED displays this generation means that the feature differences this year are far smaller compared to last year’s iPhone 11 vs 11 Pro juxtaposition. This is a major change in the product line-up that in my opinion makes the lower-end variants significantly more interesting and more viable versus the more expensive Pro-counterparts.

The lack of a higher refresh-rate display option is a pity, but given the battery impact on other devices on the market, it might have been wise for Apple to hold this feature back until the technology has matured enough to ensure a non-negative user experience. As it stands, the battery life of the iPhone 12 and 12 Pro is in line with last year’s 11 Pro – which is excellent.

Performance of the new iPhone 12’s is both a strength-point as well as a weakness. The strength is that the new A14 chip is by far the best performing mobile SoC on the market right now. The weakness is, that compared to the A13, the generational improvements aren’t as great as prior A-series SoC jumps. In every-day usage, I’m sure the iPhone 12s are faster than the iPhone 11 devices, but I’d be hard-pressed to actually notice this without a side-by-side comparison. This includes CPU-side use-cases as well as GPU-side gaming use-cases, which see an even smaller generational upgrade.

On the camera side, Apple has kept the base formula of the iPhone 11 series, and resorted to smaller generational improvements. The largest improvement is a new HDR algorithm that is actually quite noticeable in daylight shots, and produces better tone-mapping and contrast-rich pictures. The ultra-wide-angle module especially sees much better image processing with more details. Oddly enough, the telephoto module on the 12 Pro has been consistently worse than the 11 Pro in our testing, with far less detail retention.

In low-light, the camera’s new f/1.6 aperture does allow for slightly better light capture, however the general processing and Night Mode doesn’t seem to have been changed much this generation. The ultra-wide-angle’s added capability of Night Mode means that it’s not completely useless in low-light, although it’s not quite as high quality as competitor solutions.

While I’m relatively happy with the camera experience, I feel like Apple didn’t quite push the boundaries as far as they could have. The competition both has better hardware, and has made huge strides in terms of computational photography and image processing, and there’s just better phone cameras out there right now.

Good Improvements, Although Not Very Exciting

I have two verdicts for the iPhone 12’s, one for the 12 Pro and one for the regular iPhone 12.

For the iPhone 12 Pro, unless you’re coming from an older-generation device, there’s very few selling-points compared to the iPhone 11 Pro. The screen is slightly better, the cameras are slightly better, and it’s posting slightly better performance. Battery life being the same and the ergonomics being arguable, that only leaves 5G as the major unique feature of the new device. At this stage of 5G deployment, whether a 5G-compatible device is worth the upgrade for you is going to be highly dependent on your location and carrier. At $999 or 1159€ I feel that the phone should have offered something more to make the choice easier.

 

The iPhone 12, on the other hand, is in my opinion Apple’s best iPhone in a very long time. At $799 / 909€, the only real tangible thing you’re losing out on versus the Pro is the telephoto module. You’re still getting an excellent screen, the same performance, almost identical battery life, and otherwise identical everyday camera experience for $200 less. Even though it’s $100 more expensive than the iPhone 11, the much better screen elevates it into a better tier-category. The fact that it’s a lighter phone and fingerprint resistant aluminium is actually a plus in my book.

The iPhone 12 mini and 12 Pro Max are still open for debate as we didn’t have a chance to review them yet. If you’re looking for a small phone, the 12 mini looks like a perfect device, while if you’re looking for a max-sized phone and don’t mind the larger price-tag, the 12 Pro Max also certainly going to be a good option, especially if the new camera module hardware pans out.

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  • DejayC - Monday, November 30, 2020 - link

    I find the flat edges of my iPhone 12 mini to be easier to grip on to than the curved edges of the older iPhones.
  • FunBunny2 - Monday, November 30, 2020 - link

    I was just about to post just that. could it be that short people with small hands are the only ones to complain about flat edged phones (and other things)? those for 4 edges, intelligently chamfered of course, are what give you purchased to hold on to that slippery thing.
  • jeremyshaw - Monday, November 30, 2020 - link

    I think completely flat edges work better on smaller phones. Mini, 5, 5S, 5C, etc. 4 and 4S as well. Though the 4 and 4S were "technically" flat, they did have the actual back and screen protruding enough to be a stepped approximation of a curved edge.
  • xaneo - Saturday, December 26, 2020 - link

    I'm jumping onto the flat edges bandwagon, all for it.
  • milkywayer - Wednesday, December 2, 2020 - link

    I still don't understand what makes the iPhone 12 worth ~$850 after tax compared to iPhone 11 that apples website is selling for $640~? Can someone explain?

    My biggest gripe with iOS is it kills my previous app pretty fast e.g. I could be watching YouTube or browsing a chrome tab but if I switch to reddit and or then whatsapp and then come back to the chrome or youtube, it'll make likely reload the entire app/page and I lose my progress.

    I got tired of the small keyboard on my 2020 iphone SE and was going back and forth between picking iPhone 11 vs iPhone 12 and when I realized the 13 still has the same 4gb RAM, it was an easy decision going for the iphone 11 as both have the same display size and except for the tiny bit faster cpu which I probably wouldn't have noticed browsing chrome or reddit and the oled screen which isn't a big deal.

    I couldn't justify spending almost 35-40% more for a tiny tiny upgrade.

    What I would love for would be to get a bigger screen size like the pro max but apple has prices those out of my budget and most people's budgets I'd assume.
  • Frantisek - Friday, December 4, 2020 - link

    I guess very durable screen on 12 can pay for itself.
  • Speedfriend - Sunday, December 6, 2020 - link

    Your point about iOS is one of the main reasons I don't use an iPhone. I day trade and iOS suspending apps in the background means that I have switched quickly to a trading app to check prices not realising they are totally out of date. Totally useless
  • blackcrayon - Thursday, December 10, 2020 - link

    That sounds like that particular app doesn't work properly. Apps can refresh in the background, but even if not, why would it take more than a second to update from waking a suspended app?
  • ZGamer - Monday, December 7, 2020 - link

    12 Pro models ship with 6GB ram vs 4GB.

    As with everything it depends on which models your looking and how your looking to buy. If looking at purchasing outright for some of the mvno carriers or prepaid service the 11 is a better deal. If looking at deals with bill pay credits and other incentives it can be very cheap to get a 12.

    Sales around Black Friday had the iPhone 12 for free with qualifying trade and bill pay credits....12 Pro for $99 and 12 Pro Max for $199 if you had the right set of circumstances (new line/port-in only for AT&T and Best Buy).

    In general year or year performance gains are generally pretty small, it's the two to five year old devices that can see larger performance improvements.....and a fresh battery.
  • ebernet - Wednesday, December 9, 2020 - link

    @milkywayer these are some of the reasons that would lead me to pick a 12 over an 11...

    1. The iPhone 11 is an LCD screen instead of OLED, with a 2x Retina display and 1792‑by‑828‑pixel resolution at 326 ppi. The 12 is OLED with a 3 pixel per point for 2532-by-1170-pixel resolution at 460 ppi. The OLED allows the screen to be closer to the edge. I would think that is the biggest reason.
    2. Significantly better night mode
    3. Only 32% more, not 35-40

    There are a bunch of other reasons to choose the 12 over the 11, but for me the change from LCD to OLED at MUCH higher pixel resolution and a more durable screen is sufficient.

    That being said, I am still on my XS Max and will be waiting for the 13. There were days when I would upgrade my iPhone EVERY year (original all the way through the 4S). As the curve of improvements slowed down I went to every other year (5S, 6S Plus). Now I am on a 3 year tick and the XS Max is plenty good enough for me. I am looking forward to HOPEFULLY some kind of better optical zoom in the iPhone 13. However, if this was my tock year I'd be going for a 12 Pro Max with 256, but if I had to choose between an 11 and a 12 it would be a NO brainer, much more than last year choosing between the 11 and the XR (much more of a valid comparison because they both shared very similar screens). The screen on the 12 is on its own worth the price delta between the 12 and 11.

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