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HomeTechnologyYear-ender 2025: 5 best camera phones launched this year

Year-ender 2025: 5 best camera phones launched this year

A quick look back at 2025’s biggest camera phone launches. From powerful zoom systems to portrait focused tuning and smart software led photography, here are the five phones that shaped mobile imaging this year.

December 25, 2025 / 08:01 IST
Vivo X300 Pro

2025 made smartphone cameras exciting again. After years of brands obsessing over fast charging, foldable screens, or ultra slim designs, this year felt different. The camera finally returned to the center stage, and not in a quiet, predictable way. It came back with noise, ambition, and a lot of competition.

Companies seemed to understand something important. Most people don’t buy a phone for features they’ll occasionally use. They buy it for the one thing they’ll use every single day: the camera. And so, the launches this year didn’t just talk about specs, they talked about moments. About zooming into birds on distant branches. About capturing people honestly, without heavy filters. About shooting videos while walking without turning them shaky or distracting. About night photography that looks calm, clear, and surprisingly natural.

This year’s camera phones weren’t trying to impress photographers alone. They were trying to win everyday users. People who want good pictures without learning complicated settings. People who want selfies that don’t look artificial. Videos that don’t feel chaotic. And photos that don’t feel like effort.

Some brands leaned into extremely high resolution zoom lenses. Some focused on portraits and human expressions. Some quietly relied on smart software to balance colors, light, and details. But the outcome across the board was similar. Photography started to feel effortless again. Raise the phone, click, and trust the result. That became the unspoken promise of 2025.

And now, looking back at a year full of launches, five phones clearly stood out. Not because they were perfect, but because they shaped conversations around photography in their own distinct ways.

Vivo X300 Pro

Vivo made zoom photography a headline feature this year. The X300 Pro launched with a triple rear camera system, including a 50MP main camera, a 50MP ultra wide lens, and a 200MP telephoto lens dedicated to long distance shots. The idea itself felt bold. A zoom lens with 200 megapixels was something people talked about the moment it launched. And when brands generate conversations like that, it tells you they’re aiming for a shift, not just another release.

The telephoto supported up to 20x zoom, which made it a standout for anyone who enjoys capturing subjects that are far away: birds, architecture, sunsets, wildlife, moons, anything that sits outside arm’s length. The main camera used Sony’s LYT 828 sensor, built to capture more light and detail, especially when lighting conditions weren’t ideal. The 50MP front camera also matched the rear system’s intent, offering selfies that looked sharp without feeling over processed.

Vivo’s partnership with ZEISS brought a cinematic touch to the camera tuning. Photos felt polished without looking unnatural. Especially in night shots, where the camera didn’t look noisy or confused. The phone was built for people who like discovery: finding details that the eye can’t always reach and capturing them without turning photography into effort.

Oppo Find X9 Pro

If Vivo chased distance, Oppo chased faces. The Find X9 Pro launched with a 50MP main sensor, 50MP ultra wide lens, and a 200MP telephoto lens tuned by Hasselblad. Oppo also launched a teleconverter accessory in China, giving users even more optical reach. But the soul of this phone wasn’t the zoom alone, it was portrait photography.

The camera system seemed built to capture people like stories, not subjects. Portrait mode looked warm, layered, and natural. Skin tones didn’t look like a heavy filter was applied. Shadows didn’t feel forced. And faces didn’t look flat. The 50MP front camera carried the same philosophy, making selfies feel balanced, especially in group shots where everyone looked intentional, not blurred or forgotten.

Oppo supported 4K video recording at 120fps with HDR, making videos look smooth even when captured casually, while walking or adjusting grip. This phone didn’t want you to miss a face or expression. It proved that camera phones can feel powerful even when they choose emotion over extremes.

iPhone 17 Pro Max

Apple took a different approach this year: consistency over spectacle. The iPhone 17 Pro Max launched with a 48MP triple rear camera system, meaning all three lenses: main, ultra wide, and telephoto, carried the same resolution. Instead of pushing one lens to extremes, Apple balanced all three, making transitions between lenses feel smooth and reliable.

The phone supported 4K Dolby Vision video at 120fps. This year, it became the phone most users instinctively trusted for video. Not because it was loud, but because it didn’t break frames or create chaos when filming moving subjects or shaky hands. Apple also introduced Camera Control, a new physical button that made adjusting exposure and zoom feel natural without diving into menus.

The 18MP front camera with Center Stage ensured subjects stayed in frame while recording videos. Apple didn’t try to win with surprise. It tried to win with reassurance. And in 2025, reassurance became a camera feature too.

Samsung Galaxy S25 Ultra

Samsung entered the year like someone determined to own every frame. The S25 Ultra launched with a 200MP main camera, 50MP ultra wide lens, and 50MP telephoto lens supporting 5x optical zoom through a periscope system. Samsung’s cameras have always been bold, but this year they were bold with control.

Samsung added improved video stabilization, making recordings feel smooth even when the user was walking or adjusting grip mid shot. Day photos looked textured, sharp, and detailed. Night photography looked bright without looking noisy. Moving subjects didn’t feel chaotic or messy.

Samsung didn’t choose subtlety in 2025. It chose clarity, detail, and confidence. And it delivered that energy well, without turning the camera into a confusing experience.

Google Pixel 10 Pro

Google entered 2025 quietly but with intent. The Pixel 10 Pro launched with a 50MP main camera, 48MP ultra wide, 48MP telephoto lens supporting 5x optical zoom, and a 42MP front camera. But like every year, Google’s real strength wasn’t just the numbers, it was the software intelligence behind the camera.

Google cameras don’t try to look engineered, they try to look real. And 2025 proved that philosophy again. Day photos looked natural, not processed. Night photos looked bright without looking noisy. Portraits felt soft, honest, and human. Skies didn’t blow out. Shadows didn’t collapse. Details stayed intact even when lighting conditions were tricky.

Google didn’t want every shot to feel like a masterpiece. It wanted every shot to feel like memory. And that made Pixel 10 Pro one of the most emotionally grounded camera launches of 2025.

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first published: Dec 25, 2025 08:00 am

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