What's up guys lord haven, here back with another video, the note 20 embargoes has dropped and most, if not all, tech YouTubers are making videos talking about the note 20 ultra in that wave. The note 20 has been the forgotten child with only coverage on it being how Samsung have finally dropped an overpriced phone. I decided to compare this to specifically from the camera department because they have quite literally the same camera on paper and both they build the same price tag. That's a thousand dollars in this video I'm going to use the cameras as one of the ways to justify that shocking price tag on the note 20. So if a phone's camera is the dealbreaker for you when buying a phone, you might want to watch this to the end. As I explain why you might want to skip the note 20 and pick up the s20 plus I'm saving my full experience on performance and daily use of the Galaxy Note 20 for the full review.
So you want to subscribe and turn on notifications for that to start this off, let's get you up to speed on camera specs. On both phones on the Samsung Galaxy note 20, you get a triple 12, megapixel, f, 1.8, wide angle, lens, a 64, megapixel, f, 2.0, telephoto lens a 12, megapixel, f, 2.2, 120 degree, ultrawide lens and a 10, megapixel, f, 2.2, wide angle, selfie camera! Stop me. If you see anything similar going on here on the Samsung Galaxy s20, plus you get a quad 12, megapixel, f, 1.8, wide angle, lens, a 64, megapixel, f, 2.0, telephoto lens a 12, megapixel, f, 2.2, 123 degree, ultrawide lens a 0.3, megapixel, f, 1.0 term of light 3d sensor and a 10 megapixel, f, 2.2, wide-angle self camera. As always, with all my camera comparison tests, I installed all the latest. Software updates on our phones turned off any beauty modes and the camera lenses were cleaned prior to taking off these shots.
What you see here is the raw untouched image and footage quality you'll get if you choose to go out and buy the phones. The selfies short on both phones are in one word, similar, rightly so, because they're quite literally the same lens with the same camera configuration in that regard, they're pleasing to the eye they feel rich, detailed and clarity is nothing short of amazing color temperature on both phones is similar, as both do a great job. Keeping colors and tones consistent. The ultra red surface on both phones is also quite impressive, with both fitting equal amount of room in the frame, even in this mode, colors are kept. Accurate clarity is on point and color temperature equal in terms of portrait selfies shot on both phones.
I'm just utterly impressed note that the Galaxy Note 20 fits more in the ultra dangle portrait shots compared to the galaxy s20 plus, when you expect them to all in all both channel grid selfies, as expected of Samsung flagship phones and similar with all or most phones. These days, both phones struggle to find your face with a mask on so for accurate, good portrait. Selfies your mask is going to have to come off if you can spot a difference in these samples. Let me know in the comment section below which selfies you prefer on front facing videos. These samples were both short with the wide angle lens at 4k 30 frames per second here is where I noted the first color temperature change, where tones on the s20 plus appear a bit warmer than that on video from the note 20.
Both phones do a good job in keeping the excessive lighting for this. In the background and the subject in focus, clean stabilization is on point when you start moving around color temperature and quality remains consistent and both do a good job, keeping focus on you in terms of audio quality. This case, in the background over there and uh, how is that audio quality number one I kind of like how both phones are keeping things very, very clear, very, very sharp colors are natural, contrast uh, my skin is pretty at some points and my hair, you can clearly see the strands on my hair and that's natural both, coming in the background. Moving on to the rear main cameras on paper again, both camera setups are the same. The 12 megapixel wide, f, 1.8 shooter on the Galaxy Note 2 and the s20 plus adjusts to pub give them a scenario where there's a lot in frame and watch how both nail colors clarity, the depth and color temperature. These times, when you put a human subject in frame and things get a bit finicky for the new trinity, this is seen in how it struggles to handle all the light coming in on the subject.
Destiny plus doesn't experience these issues at all, though. At this point, color temperatures vary from the arch on the note 20. This also happened from time to time in the shot that hard one apparent subject in focus example, this playground hearts on the s70 plus you'll notice that there's nothing washed out in the foreground and middle ground of the frame. That's the hedge, the pavement and the heart on the no trench. However, we can't see bits of the hedge and heart slightly washed out and that affects how you perceive the colors and dynamic range of watts in frame moving on to the ultra ride, both phones, sport, a 12 megapixel ultra dangle shooter with a 120-degree angle, field of view on the Galaxy Note, 20 and a 123 field of view, angle on the galaxy s20 plus.
As such, you notice the s20 plus fit a bit more in frame compared to the note 20. , I'm a fan of the ultrawide and first thing I notice is how both phones handle dynamic range. Well, that's even in Samsung's scene, optimizer turned off side by side. The note 20 appears to produce higher contrast images compared to those on the s20 plus, but it's something you recognize the longest at both samples. Color temperature is also warmer on the note 20, but ever so slightly by the way, if you're enjoying this video be that cool, guy or girl that subscribes to the channel and likes this video.
Your support means the world to me. Moving on to the protest mode on both phones, both the note 20 and the s20 plus map or the subject edges properly, giving accurate colors, sharpness and contrast side by side. It's a safe drawer, short on the same phone onwards to the telephoto lens, both have a 64 megapixel telephoto lens, with 1.1 x, optical zoom, on the s20 plus and 3x optical zoom. On the note 20. At 1.21x optical zoom, the s20 plus, is in its element as seen how the subject in frame is kept natural, accurate, colors and tones all throughout pleasant to the eye. The note 20 at 1.1 x also performs well with the only difference coming in on what you talked about earlier about the background lighting balance, and that's only in some scenarios move things to 3x optical zoom, that the note20 supports and results are just impressive. At this point, the s70 plus has switched to hybrid zoom, and the note 20 is taking full advantage of its hybrid optical zoom capability.
To get you close to the subject. Both phones will turn out images with the natural blight effect from the telephoto lens and the fact that the s20 plus can achieve image quality, that's at par with the new 20, is mind-blowing but expected, and also both allow you to take a picture with the whole 64 megapixel capability of the camera, while still on the topic of zooming in this is the perfect segue for us to talk about the 30x zoom capability of both phones. I'm going to start calling this the far, far away carousel zoom test in that regard. It's only fitting for us to talk about getting to 30x, to fully understand and appreciate what the cameras can do. So we start here on the ultrawide 0.5x lens, and here you can see that 123 degree field of view on the s20 plus fit much more in frame than the note 20. Next is one x see how the note 20 frames is slightly washed out than that on the s20 plus next is 2x zoom, and now we can pick up people in frame at 4x, zoom, and now we're getting warmer being able to pick up skin tones and next is 10x.
Zoom clarity is top-notch, color is composed and temperature is consistent. It gets 20x zoom, and it's as if you're standing directly in front of the carousel 30x, and we can't complain about image, quality or need to go any further. You might never need to zoom in on the h30x, but zooming around and just playing around with it is pretty much fun. I have no complaints on the night mode on both phones give the phones enough exposure time, and they literally turn night into day with ease. I also like how Samsung allows you to shoot night mode pictures through the focal lengths or forwarding the camera just know that images will get noisier as you zoom in during night mode in terms of video, both phones max out at 8k, and the note 28 can now do 8k in 21x9 aspect ratio in pro video to really enjoy it.
Okay, I suggest you use it for still videos. Both phones also perform superbly at 4k. Both phones allow you to change between the three perspectives, mid, recording and do a great job stabilizing footage thanks to optical image, stabilization about- and I start walking around- stop. Let's try zooming in two okay, pretty interesting, zoom back out. Audio quality is good too, especially with how both phones do a great job at minimizing, ambience and surrounding noise, and keeping focus on you right.
So, let's wrap this up. Samsung is asking you for a thousand dollars for the note 20 and depending on season deals right now. You can pick up the s20 plus for discounted prices south of seven hundred dollars. Now my job as a tech reviewer gets hard when I have to recommend a phone and the options at my disposal content with each other in a very interesting and similar way, especially when I have to prove the value of what I suggest. Yes, these are the aspects that make up a phone from the screen to refresh rate to battery life, to the processor, build material, but there's just something about a smartphone manufacturer asking you to pay a thousand dollars for phone with a camera.
That's literally similar to that for preceding flagship release that is selling for much less at the moment. That's just straight up rude with the galaxy s20 and the note 20 you'll be getting the same. Versatile cameras, that's a given! What separates them is the camera upgrades that have trickled down from the note 20 ultra into the note 20, to make it an ultra camera stuff, like 8k pro video in 21x9, being able to block sound coming in from a particular direction front facing video in 4k 60fps, which is an upgrade from the previous note 10. Even at that point, it's difficult to justify asking a thousand dollars for the opportunity. Don't get me wrong, though.
Samsung have corrected where they went wrong previously and given us a very useful, future-proof camera on the note, 20. Full of innovative features. Example, how we thought 8k recording on a smartphone is a gimmick to how good it to become right now that it might just be the new go to for video recording of content creators that pick up this phone. That said, looking at the camera alone on the note, 20 and stacking it up against that on the 20 plus and a couple of thoughts come up on how Samsung might have diluted the node DNA this year, how they've, given us an overpriced phone, how they've made a confusing flagship, maybe they're, trying to fill that price gap of the note 20 ultra debuting less than the s20 ultra. Only Samsung knows at this point.
So if you had the note20 in your sights and the cameras, what was left for you to make a decision, I'd recommend that you skip the note28 and pick up the s3t plus both have similar camera hardware, similar camera, specs software and features. That's been proved by the samples you've seen here. That said, the full review of the Galaxy Note 20 is in the making, alongside other videos where compared to the note 10 from last year. If you enjoyed this video or needed it hit that like button and subscribe, lord Hassan here signing out.
Source : Lord Hezion