Desk Report
Publish: 21 Oct 2019, 11:33 am
When OnePlus left the very segment it created to pursue the flagship slice of the cake, it left a bitter taste in the mouth of many of its fans. For a while, it seemed as though the “Flagship Killer” segment would remain vacant, or populated with phones that would always lack serious horsepower. That all changed last year with the introduction of Xiaomi’s new venture, the Pocophone F1. Lauded by fans and praised by critics everywhere, this was the phone we all needed back in the space. It was, by no means, perfect. Build quality was unimpressive, the screen LCD, notched, and not so bright. The camera was mostly ok to potato depending upon the light, and only had a single lens camera system (the additional 5MP depth sensor doesn’t really count). Enter the K20 Pro/Mi 9T Pro, the unofficial sequel to the F1, correcting most of the flaws the original had.
Build
Where the Poco brandished an all-plastic unibody design, the K20 Pro features the fit-in-with-the-crowd glass and metal side design. But even though the design choice serves no purpose (no wireless charging), Redmi decided to give it a paint job that really shines wherever you keep it. The buttons are a bit mushy, but extra points for the flamboyant power button. The phone also has quite a nice heft to it, meaning that the phone was built to last.
Screen
The screen was quite possibly the most unanimously hated feature on the F1, first of all, sporting a notch, and adding insult to injury, it sported an LCD panel, in a day and age where OLEDs rule the scene. Thankfully, the K20 Pro addresses both issues, with a notch-less full screen 6.39” OLED display. The display maybe a “meagre” 1080+ but that takes nothing away to how good this screen is, considering its price bracket. Colours are accurate, blacks are, well, black, just as you’d expect from an OLED. Also, even if it is a personal opinion, bonus points for a flat screen and not the annoying curved ones; it makes life much more convenient since finding a good tempered glass protector is easier.
Camera
The camera department is where the K20 Pro makes the most improvement, considering its predecessor. Gone is the 5MP “depth sensing” system, and in its place, Xiaomi has put 2 entirely different camera systems, sporting an ultrawide lens and a 2X telephoto lens, along with the 48MP IMX586 sensor main camera. If this setup looks familiar, it’s because this same setup also resides on the OnePlus 7 Pro, a phone nearly twice as expensive.
As for the quality, it is a very reliable shooter. The IMX586 is a very capable sensor, and not too many manufacturers can screw this up. Plus, Xiaomi’s own twists on the camera software yields very good results.
Unfortunately, the same cannot be said for the ultra-wide and telephoto, with the ultrawide being the biggest offender. The ultra-wide creates very grainy pictures in anything other than broad daylight. Also none of the lenses have Optical Image Stabilizing (OIS), meaning pictures under somewhat low light comes out all blurry, especially so for the telephoto, which by the way, doesn’t work unless the lighting is exceptional. Under normal light, your camera digitally crops when you switch to telephoto.
The phone also comes with its version of nightmode, but the processing on it is a complete hit or miss, and almost always noisy, and blurry thanks to the omission of the aforementioned OIS.
Perhaps, the biggest let-down was the pop-up camera, the technique they used to get a notch-less full screen display. Quite simply, it’s horrible, no dynamic range, washed out colours.
Video quality is ok, you do feel the omission of the OIS, but quality wise, its good. As a bonus, it also does super slow-mo videos at 960fps at 1080p.
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