DPReview smartphone reviews are written with the needs of photographers in mind. We focus on camera features, performance, and image quality. The iPhone X is the newest flagship phone from Apple.
It comes with twin optically stabilized 12MP rear cameras, a 7MP front-facing camera with 'TrueDepth' technology, artificial background blur and specialized lighting effects, DNG Raw file capture, and of course is otherwise a highly capable and extremely speedy mobile device.
And it should be, given the asking price: at an MSRP of $999, the iPhone X (pronounced iPhone Ten, which I'll admit I'm still getting used to) is priced comfortably higher than many of its current competitors that also come with an emphasis on photographic prowess.
Out-of-camera JPEG in HDR mode.
ISO 20 | 1/229 sec | F1. 8
Photo by Carey Rose
As with just about every modern high-end smartphone, the results of the picture-taking process on the iPhone are as much about clever software tricks as they are about the hardware. With the software and hardware combined, does the iPhone X truly offer image quality comparable to so-called 'real cameras?' Is artificial background blur driving the final nails into the interchangeable-lens camera coffin?
Of course, the answer isn't all that simple, and depends an awful lot on the preferences of the user behind the lens. But let's dive in and take a look at what Apple's latest smartphone shooter is capable of.
Key Photographic / Video Specifications
Dual 12MP sensors
28/56mm equivalent focal lengths
F1. 8/2. 4 aperture
On-sensor phase detection
Quad-LED flash
DNG Raw capture and manual control with 3rd party apps
4K video at 60 fps
1080p 120/240fps slow-motion video
7MP front-facing 'TrueDepth' camera with F2. 2 aperture
Other Specifications
5. 8-inch, 2436x1125 OLED
Apple A11 Fusion chipset
3GB RAM
64/256GB storage
2,716mAh battery
Wireless charging (Qi compatible)
2018-1-31 18:13