The autofocus on the OnePlus Nord is accurate both indoors and outdoors, though not as quick as some of the more expensive smartphone cameras. They also noted the lack of zero shutter lag in lab conditions, meaning that there was a slight delay between the pressing of the shutter and capture.

I just got a Nord, and the camera is disgusting. Is there a fix to this, like an external camera I could buy? I don't know if g cam would fix it because the camera is still awful on Instagram and snapchat


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Hi, I'm a new owner of a OnePlus Nord. Great phone with one downside. The camera, when I take pictures they get altered or photoshopped in some way. When I view the picture I can see the changes being made. Looks like something is processing the image. When it's done, well it doesn't improve the image.

Which takes better photos: the OnePlus Nord or the iPhone SE? We decided to pit the two phones against each other in a quick OnePlus Nord vs iPhone SE camera shootout to find out. Be sure to cast your vote on the winner in the poll at the end of the article.

In this first set of images, I shot out in my garden in bright light. Shooting upward at the telegraph pole demonstrates the sharpness capturing capabilities of both cameras. Shooting upward at the leaves gives us a good idea of the dynamic range capabilities from each camera. The iPhone SE tends to deliver more color and detail in the shadows.

The first pair of images here are of a viaduct in the distance. These tests will help us evaluate how much detail that each camera captures. The Nord seems to capture more fine detail in the field compared to the SE. The second pair shows a shaded tree in front of a fairly bright sky. This is a true test of dynamic range and color accuracy. The SE is displaying more detail in the darkest shadows while correctly exposing for bright highlights.

Cameras are a bit of a touchy subject on OnePlus phones, especially when it comes to the non-Pro line. Much of the tension seems to stem from the decision to abandon the telephoto camera on the OnePlus 7T and also slightly downgrade the aperture on the main 48MP one, moving to the OnePlus 8.

The OnePlus Nord also partakes in this saga in its unique way, mostly by borrowing its main camera straight from the OnePlus 8. It is the same Sony IMX586, 48MP, 0.8m, 1/2.25", Quad-Bayer sensor, behind an f/1.8 lens. Its additional perks of OIS and PDAF are carried over, as well. And seeing how the OnePlus Nord is cheaper than the OnePlus 8, this can technically be counted as a step in the right direction value-wise? It depends on how you look at things.

The Oxygen OS camera app experience remains consistent and impressively full-featured on the Nord. You get every bit of software functionality from the mainstream OnePlus 8 pair with the same familiar layout too.

Most of the settings are in the top right corner of the viewfinder. The app now makes it easier to shoot 48MP images without having to switch to the manual camera. There's a toggle at the top row of icons that you can use to switch between the 12MP or the full resolution 48MP modes. Relatively new to the top row are the Macro camera toggle, and a new shortcut for filters.

Otherwise, the camera UI is intuitive for the most part. Swiping either direction horizontally changes the modes while swiping up shows you the drawer with all the camera modes available. You can customize which modes you want to keep outside of the drawer.

Pro mode lets you shoot in RAW (12MP), saves two presets, and lets you adjust all the camera settings (ISO, White balance, shutter speed, focus, and exposure compensation). Interestingly enough, in auto mode, both the ISO and white balance values can set themselves even higher than what their respective sliders allow. There's also a histogram and horizontal level - both useful for composing shots and exposure. You can also save your custom settings as a preset for extra convenience. Shooting in Pro mode only works with the main camera.

Double-pressing the power key fires up the camera app in a pinch. From a deep sleep, this could take as long as three seconds. In most cases, it'll take just under two seconds. Snapping the image is quick but there might be a slight delay if you immediately try to preview the most recent photo.

The main 48MP camera on the Nord has become somewhat of a familiar mainstay on recent OnePlus devices. The Nord borrowed it from the OnePlus 8 and it, in turn, got it from the OnePlus 7T Pro, which lifted it from the OnePlus 7 Pro.

The dynamic range is quite good with the help of OnePlus' local tone mapping algorithms, which work well in high-contrast scenes. We didn't see any image-stacking artifacts. These have been plaguing OnePlus cameras lately with camera shake or moving objects causing blurry areas in parts of the frame.

HDR is always on and works behind the scenes. The puzzling bit is that the camera settings have an option called "UltraShot HDR", which is turned on by default, and yet, turning it off doesn't seem to change how the photos look. Either the UltraShot HDR algorithm is not triggering properly, or it is always on, regardless of this setting toggle.

OnePlus has made it very easy to switch to the full 48MP resolution of the main camera with just a single tap on the main camera UI. Quad-Bayer sensors aren't meant to be used in this manner, though, and it shows in the end result. 48MP shots come out looking softer and noisier than their 12MP counterparts. They don't really offer enough extra detail to be worth it either.

Hardly a surprise, when we consider that the Nord zooms in by cropping the center of its main 48MP Quad Bayer camera. The algorithm first goes through the standard binning process to get a regular 12MP photo, then crops a 2x zoom from that and upscales it to 12MP as a final step.

With a resolution of 8MP, the ultrawide snapper on the Nord is a bit of a downgrade from the usual 16MP modules, OnePlus tends to use. This camera struggles to maintain both sharpness and dynamic range at the level of the main camera. Since this is a lot more common with ultrawides, it is a bit more forgivable but we've also seen better ultra-wides at lower price brackets. The choice of this camera is an apparent cost-cutting decision.

The Nord also offers a Portrait mode. It even comes with two different zoom levels - 1x and 2x and with an optional beauty filter. This is where the dedicated 5MP depth camera comes into play and it seems to be pulling its own weight. Portrait shots come out looking very impressive, with excellent subject detection and separation.

The actual image for the portraits comes from the main camera. So when you zoom in, it goed through the same binning, cropping, upscaling routine as the regular zoom mode. Hence, it's not terribly sharp.

Speaking of non-human subjects, last and probably least, there is a 2MP dedicated, fixed-focus macro camera on the OnePlus Nord. With an aperture of f/2.4, it is rather dim, as well. Naturally, some patience, special care and attention and a few tries are necessary to get usable shots. It is possible, though. Results are serviceable.

The Nord has a pair of selfie cameras at its disposal - a 32MP and an 8MP, both with dark f/2.5 lenses. Nothing too fancy, like autofocus, but you do still get the benefits from the bigger 1.12m pixels and wider 105-degree field of view on the secondary selfie cam.

The OnePlus Nord can capture video at up to 4K@30fps from both its main and its ultrawide cameras. Seeing how the latter is 8MP and outputs stills at 3264 x 2448 pixels, we are not exactly sure how 4K video is achieved. But, the simple test of covering the corresponding sensor proves that both modules shoot video in 3840 x 2160p.

At full 4K resolution, clips from the main camera look very competent, but are far from perfect. Colors look nice but could be considered a bit too saturated by some. The level of detail is excellent for the class.

For stabilization, the main snapper on the OnePlus Nord has OIS. For some extra stability on top of that, there is Super Stable mode. That one always uses the ultrawide camera as its source and crops away quite a bit of the frame. Even so, you still get a slightly wider field of view than the one from the main camera. The actual effectiveness of the stabilization itself is rather impressive.

Low-light photo quality on the Nord is a bit of a mixed bag. OnePlus has had a lot of time to gradually and incrementally improve the performance of the familiar 48MP main camera since it is so prolific in its lineup. The little tweaks and improvements do add-up.

Ultrawide cameras naturally have an even harder time in low-light conditions. That definitely rings true for the modest 8MP, f/2.3 unit on the OnePlus Nord. Noise and softness are abundant and light sources tend to clip easily.

Nightscape is available on the main camera, as well as the ultrawide. Unfortunately, there is no 2x zoom Nightscape. Using it on low-light ultrawide shots often makes the difference between a throwaway shot and a keeper. Really impressive stuff.

If you rarely open the camera app, then there's a lot to like here. Despite the plasticky build, the N200 5G doesn't feel like a cheap phone. Its narrow frame fits nicely in my palm, though parts of the 6.49-inch screen can be hard to reach with my thumb. The screen itself has slim bezels and a hole-punch selfie camera, so it looks quite modern.

You're getting a fair bit for your money with the N200 5G, so it's a shame the main 13-megapixel camera has to ruin it. Photos shot during the day seem OK at first, but zoom in for a closer look and you'll see that many photos resemble oil paintings, a result of aggressive noise reduction; every surface looks smooth with no fine textures. I've also got the $300 Moto G Stylus on hand, which has the same camera as the sub-$250 Moto G Power 2021, and the amount of detail in photos from the N200 5G is lacking in comparison.

OnePlus also includes a 2-megapixel macro and a 2-megapixel monochrome camera, but I'd rather have seen these omitted, with the resources spent on improving the main camera. Less is more! The Nord N200 just made me want to stop taking photos altogether. ff782bc1db

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