Huawei P30 Pro First Impressions

Widely-rated as having the very best camera in any smartphone, the Huawei P30 Pro is also a powerhouse flagship in its own right.

But come on. All you really care about is the camera. So let me get the other stuff out of the way first.

Windows Intelligence In Your Inbox

Sign up for our new free newsletter to get three time-saving tips each Friday — and get free copies of Paul Thurrott's Windows 11 and Windows 10 Field Guides (normally $9.99) as a special welcome gift!

"*" indicates required fields

This field is for validation purposes and should be left unchanged.

From a form factor perspective, the P30 Pro looks and feels very much like the Mate 20 Pro I fell in love with earlier this year. It’s more slippery than soap, comes in fun if overly-reflective colors, and provides a very tall and thin form factor that’s a bit more friendlier in one-handed use than most modern smartphones.

There are differences, of course.

For example, the P30 Pro has a tiny, teardrop-style notch housing the front camera. And on the rear, you’ll see three of the rear camera lenses arranged in a vertical column; on the Mate 20 Pro, the total of three lenses are arranged in a square grid along with the flash.

And … that’s about it.

Internally, of course, the P30 Pro is all flagship, all the way. It’s powered by Huawei’s Kirin 980 octa-core processor with dual neural-network processing units (NPUs), and is based on the latest Arm Cortex A76 design. Depending on the model you choose, you’ll get 6 GB of RAM and 128 GB of storage or 8 GB of RAM and 128, 256, or 512 GB of storage. Connectivity is modern—802.11 ac at 2.4 GHz and 5 GHz, Bluetooth 5.0, and BLE (and SBC, AAC, aptX, aptX HD, LDAC and HWA Audio). And the display is gorgeous, a 6.47-inch wonder running at a resolution of 2340 x 1080.

And then there’s the camera system.

Technically, there are four rear cameras, not three. The three primary cameras—the ones in the vertical column—include a 40 MP wide-angle lens with an f/1.6 aperture and optical image stabilization (OIS), a  20 MP utra-wide-angle lens at an f/2.2 aperture, and a 8 MP telephoto lens with an f/3.4 aperture and OIS. The fourth camera, a Huawei Time-of-Flight (TOF) lens, supports autofocus (phase focus and contrast focus) and Huawei’s AI-based image stabilization, called AI. The front camera sports a single lens: it’s a 32 MB lens at an f/2.0 aperture.

Oof. I know, right?

And yet, there’s more. Left out of that little laundry list of camera specifications is a feature that is still semi-unique in the smartphone world but is about to get a lot more popular: True optical zoom. And not lame 2x optical zoom, as we’ve been stuck with on iPhone since 2016. But 5x optical zoom and, with Huawei’s software- and AI-based help, a 10x zoom that is supposed to not suck at all.

So I just got the handset. Which is good timing: I’m heading to Vancouver and then Seattle on this Thursday, and I will have a full week of travel and work time to test out this smartphone’s exciting new camera system. But of course, I just had to do some quick camera tests, if only in and outside my house, to see how it compares, both to its Mate 20 Pro predecessor and to the Google Pixel 3 XL, which are my own two top-rated smartphone cameras at the moment.

And. Wow.

If you recall from my review of the Mate 20 Pro, Huawei’s previously flagship excels at something I (and others) call “fauxtography,” where hyper-realism, courtesy of overly-colorful and contrasty colors replaces actual realism in an effect that many—myself included—find quite pleasing. It’s not just that, actually: the Mate 20 Pro has a very localized focus that, combined with the colorful, HDR looks, makes for truly Instagram-worthy photos. It has been, to date, the single best smartphone camera I’d ever used. Sorry, Google.

Well, the P30 Pro could very well change that. Based on my admittedly limited testing so far, it appears that the P30 Pro, even with the Master AI settings enabled, delivers less vibrant but more realistic photos by default than does the Mate 20 Pro. But they are just as detailed and provide the same localized focus, which I think is excellent.

1x zoom and …
5x zoom

The 5x zoom is interesting. On objects both near and far, details are far crisper on the P30 Pro and better withstand close, zoomed-in scrutiny in most cases. Oddly, to use zoom at all—optical or software-based—you must configure the camera to take pictures at 10 MP (4:3), the default, and not 40 MP (4:3).

I need a lot more time to see what’s happening here and to make sure I’m not missing any configurable settings. But so far, the P30 Pro camera is delivering impressive results.

More soon.

Tagged with

Share post

Please check our Community Guidelines before commenting

Conversation 11 comments

  • RickEveleigh

    Premium Member
    30 April, 2019 - 5:04 pm

    <p>Would be interested in the result of a 5x zoom @10mp vs zooming/cropping in a 1x zoom @40mp. </p>

  • PeterC

    30 April, 2019 - 5:15 pm

    <p>From the moment they penned their R&amp;D partnership with Leica 3 years ago you knew they’d produce the leading camera tech on a mobile …. This phone is going to sell exceedingly well in Europe. </p>

  • DaddyBrownJr

    30 April, 2019 - 5:34 pm

    <p>No official US variant and no US support. No thanks. </p>

    • rvanallen

      Premium Member
      01 May, 2019 - 6:02 am

      <blockquote><em><a href="#424515">In reply to DaddyBrownJr:</a></em></blockquote><p>Like what I'm reading about this handset but agree with DaddyBownJr. Service and Support, both direct or third-party, is a major factor at least for me. </p>

  • shmuelie

    Premium Member
    30 April, 2019 - 5:36 pm

    <p>40MP images… Lumia 1020 Android Edition?</p>

  • BigM72

    30 April, 2019 - 8:39 pm

    <p>Paul, check out the awesome night photography abilities (in default camera mode). </p>

  • dcdevito

    30 April, 2019 - 9:56 pm

    <p>That is one impressive device. </p>

  • harrymyhre

    Premium Member
    01 May, 2019 - 12:08 am

    <p>When you’re in Seattle, head down to the pike place market and take some pictures of the fish mongers</p>

  • roho

    Premium Member
    01 May, 2019 - 10:31 am

    <p>It seems all Paul cares about in a new cell phone is how the camera works. To me that is not a priority. I take occasional snapshots but don't want a cloud full of photos I will never look at. Give me the best specs at the best price that does communication-phone calls, texting, and messaging. My one+ 3T does it. </p><p> </p>

  • wright_is

    Premium Member
    02 May, 2019 - 12:31 am

    <p><em>But come on. All you really care about is the camera.</em></p><p>No, for me it is one of the least used and least important factors. Having a decent camera is useful, but I use it maybe half a dozen times a year. The rest of the features – display, sound etc. get used on a daily basis.</p><p><em>its Mate 20 Pro predecessor</em></p><p>It's predecessor is the P20 Pro. The Mate is the business range and the Mate 20 (Pro) is the 2019 business flagship, the P30 (Pro) is the 2019 consumer flagship. Apart from the camera and display layout, they are, internally, almost identical.</p><p>Although I have a Mate 10 Pro for private use and a P20 as a company phone… Go figure.</p>

  • siv

    06 May, 2019 - 9:37 am

    <p>I was looking at the Pixel 3 but after all the issues that Paul identified decided to get the P20 Pro and have to say that the camera is excellent. I have taken more photos with this phone than any other. I am rarely unhappy with the results. The camera produces images like you see them. All my previous cameras on phones and digital SLRs produce what I imagine is reality, but they always look crap compared to what your brain sees. The amount of times you take a sunset and the camera just didn't get the way your brain sees it. The AI in the P20 pro boosts the greens and blues so that they look much more vibrant and I am sure not faithful to absolute reality, but they do look exactly like what certainly my brain concocts from reality when I look at a beautiful landscape or sunset. </p><p><br></p><p>For me a personal phone (I have a different phone for busines) is all about the camera first, communication and running useful apps. I love Google's photoscan app that allows you to scan old photos and documents and turn them into high quality JPEGs.</p><p><br></p><p>The business one has all the serious stuff like email and productivity apps.</p><p><br></p><p>Siv</p>

Windows Intelligence In Your Inbox

Sign up for our new free newsletter to get three time-saving tips each Friday

"*" indicates required fields

This field is for validation purposes and should be left unchanged.

Thurrott © 2024 Thurrott LLC