Motorola Edge Plus vs iPhone 11 Pro Max: Camera Comparison By PhoneArena

By PhoneArena
Aug 14, 2021
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Motorola Edge Plus vs iPhone 11 Pro Max: Camera Comparison

Hello everyone this year with fawn arena, and today we have a brand new one versus one camera comparison this time with the brand-new Motorola edge plus, and we'll be comparing it against the iPhone 11 Pro Max we'll be comparing the camera, the video recording and portrait mode. Everything and let's start with the front camera, as you can see right here, I'm recording on both phones in my hands, they're handheld, no extra Gamble's. This is how they look in terms of stabilization as I'm, walking, and I can see right away some difference in the colors. But first let me tell you that the iPhone actually supports 4k resolution on the front camera of the Motorola H Plus maxes out at 1080p resolution. So the iPhone looks a little crispier with a little sharper detail next up, we'll also look at a few selfies and images from the main camera. So let's continue so here we have a photo taken with the front camera on the Motorola, h plus and the iPhone 11 Pro Max.

And yes, the one from the Motorola is not in focus, and we try taking a few photos, and this happened quite often, so we wanted to start by highlighting this problem. If you are taking a lot of selfies, this might be an issue. The iPhone can take either a close-up selfie photo or a white one, and you don't have those options on the Motorola, so the iPhone definitely has more options. Both phones also support portrait mode for selfies to blur the background and both do a good job. With this, we noticed that the Motorola tends to overexpose the photos just a bit, so they look a bit brighter than ideal, which one do you like better next up we're also comparing the main cameras in terms of video recording, and we have selected 4k video resolution on both phones, even though the Motorola X plus actually also supports 6k video, but for this test we'll be sticking to 4k.

So let's walk around a bit and see how they go in terms of video stabilization. We have no special video speed, stabilization mode, enabled on the Motorola. So it's just the one gets with the phone settings: let's walk a little faster now, which one is better able to stabilize the footage. You should be able to see better. Tell me in the comments, and we'll stop right here and next thing.

I'll do is seen how they, how fast they focus, so I'll do is just step out of the frame and come back right here. Just once again come back up, and they should be able to quickly regain the focus on my face once again focus on my face and switch to the background and once again back to me back to the background and that's a quick test of the continuous out to focus on these two phones and for this next test. We're looking at the zoom capabilities of both walls and the Motorola edge flows can actually roll as much as ten times digital zoom, using the main camera and the iPhone can record at up to six times zoom with 4k video resolution on both phones and now, let's quickly zoom out and see how smoothly they go back to the main camera. One X and you can pinch to zoom on the Motorola edge plus, while on the iPhone, you have a slightly more convenient gesture and then the iPhone. You can also go to the ultra-wide camera that you're seeing right now, let's also switch to the main camera One X on the Moto X plus you can only go to one X.

You can not use the ultra-wide camera for 4k video recordings next up. Let's take a look at a couple of portraits. Photos. Portrait mode is something we use a lot with pictures of people and both the Motorola and the iPhone use it two times the zoomed view when capturing these shots. Both looks similarly good in terms of detail, but the big difference is in the way they render colors.

The iPhone has those warmer colors. While on the Motorola we have noticeably been saturated, even pinkish colors in the second portrait shot. You see the absolutely same thing: saturated warm colors on the iPhone and D saturated bleak colors on the Motorola h+, switching over to regular photos captured with the main camera. The same story repeats as you would expect images captured during the day look good on both phones, but the Motorola has those less saturated, bleaker colors in the second photo again, the folder from the Motorola has softer details and colors that are far less saturated. You can argue that the iPhone has a bit over saturated colors, though so the truth might be somewhere in the middle.

Taking a look at a few more photos, the same thing repeats over and over again, I personally prefer those slightly warmer colors and find images from the Motorola a bit too bleak. But let me know if you feel the same way or if you disagree in the comment section. This next photo is captured using the ultra-wide cameras on both phones and notice. The difference the iPhone first has a much wider field of view and the photo looks a bit more impressive, more epic. It's also about the exposure in the colors.

The image from the motor is just too dark and just doesn't have much color in it, and this round is an easy one for the iPhone. We also tried zooming in to see which phone does better. Now. First, you see two times, zoom image, where the iPhone has the advantage, as it counts, with a dedicated two times zoom lens, and next you see three times. Zoom follow where the Motorola has the advantage, as it has a three times zoom lens of its own.

You really have to pixel peep to see the tiny differences in detail, but risking boring you to death. We have to point out once again that it is the colors that make or break an image and make the difference here on the iPhone they're, just more lively, more catchy that might be a personal preference, take a look at a couple, more shots with the ultra-wide domain and the zoom cameras on both phones and see for yourselves and next up. We take a look at video recording during nighttime with the iPhone and the Motorola H plus, and if I see right away in terms of differences is just those colors. Are you have a much more saturated in richer colors on the iPhone, and they do appear a bit toward to life on the Motorola colors look a bit on the bleak side as we approach the lamps? We also notice some differences in the terms of the dynamic range on both phones notice. How that lamp right in front of me just shines way too brightly on the Motorola or the iPhone is still able to resolve a bit of it and, let's approach its building right here and again, you can see how the lights appear so much more pleasing on the iPhone.

Next up. Let's also point the camera to a darker part of the scene and the Motorola struggles a bit with the focus, so, let's give it a helping hand and with a touch tap, to focus you're able to lock the focus here and just walking a bit to take a look at the stabilization at night. Again, both phones are just handheld without any extra equipment right here we're approaching a part of the place which is very dark and if we point towards this darker part, it's hard to see. Barely anything on the Motorola, while on the iPhone, you do get to see at least something, even though the detail is very mushy on the Motorola. Everything appears very, very dark once again notice the difference in greenery how it appears a bit of yellowish on the iPhone.

But again the Motorola is darker, but it does have a cleaner detail. It's definitely not as grainy as the iPhone in both phones again a recording, 4k, 30 video resolution, and you hear the detail on the Motorola actually appears quite pleasing and much cleaner, starting with this photo of a bar at night. Let's see how these cameras do in extreme low-light conditions. First, the big advantage that the iPhone has been its automatic night mode. It makes a world of a difference, and you can see the rich color the well controlled light from the lamps.

Everything just looks better with this automatic night mode, the motor or just by pressing the shutter key captures a decent shot with a good amount of light. But it's just no match. Color appears a bit desaturated and the image lacks appeal, switching to the ultra-wide camera. For the same night shot you see the wider field of view on the iPhone, but also it lacks detail, and it appears way too dark, especially around the corners, while here the Motorola actually has the better ultra-wide photo. Okay, now back to the main camera here and again, you see how night mode on the iPhone is a huge deal maker.

This is the colorful mood of the bar that we remember, while on the Motorola. Well, the image is just passable at best in the next photo again, you see a lot more color on the iPhone and by now it's clear that the Motorola edge plus is not quite a match for the very best phones. When it comes to low-light photos, you can try to use night mode manually on the Motorola, and that takes extra effort and a long time for the capture and then for the image to process. The resulting image looks a lot better than the regular one, but we do wish the process of capturing night mode photos was faster and automatic and colors were a bit more saturated and lively. You can see a few more nighttime shots on both phones notice, the differences and make up your mind, which one you like better in this wraps up, our camera comparison between the brand-new Motorola edge plus and the Apple iPhone 11 Pro Max now the Motorola H + is death, a worthy contender in the camera department.

It has those very impressive specs, the 109 megapixel main camera, the three times zoom del telephoto camera the ultra-wide camera. It has a versatile camera setup that covers all of your needs, but in the camera game numbers don't always tell the whole story, and that's exactly the case here, even though this one has a hundred and eight megapixel camera, and the iPhone only has a 12 megapixel camera. In reality, it is the colors and the dynamic range in details like that that matter that make an image- and in this case the iPhone is a little better with a better color reproduction. The Motorola, H plus, is not bad in any way, but it is just a step below the top cameras out there, where you have the iPhones and the Galaxy phones and the Google pixels. For that matter, and there's a video recording.

It's a similar story. You have 4k video on the iPhone 6 K video on the Motorola H Plus. But again this is not just about the numbers. It is about the quality of the image, the stabilization, the speed of focus and the colors, and the iPhone tends to do a little better plus it has support for those nice third-party apps for professional video, recording like the film, Pro, app and so on. So that's it guys.

Our quick camera comparison between the Motorola edge plus and the iPhone 11 Pro Max the Motorola is definitely a nice contender in the camera game, but not quite there yet, and did you know that you can also compare specs between different smartphones on our website phone rings? Comm, you can go into the specs compare page and there you can compare the dimensions. You can see the camera specs in a great detail. You can see the battery specs connectivity, LTE bands, everything. This is a really neat feature that I want you to know about, and that's it. My name is Vic thanks for watching this hit that thumbs up button.

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Source : PhoneArena

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