Comparison

Galaxy S22 Ultra flopped in camera speed test! Redmi K50 Ultra WON

Published

on

Galaxy S23 Ultra will be the next big hit by Samsung with a powerful mobile camera atop. Meanwhile, seems like, competition is rapidly increasing in the camera smartphone segment as a personal review shared by a tipster claims Redmi K50 Ultra beats Galaxy S22 Ultra in terms of camera shutter lag (speed).

According to a video shared by IceUniverse, Xiaomi’s Redmi K50 Ultra smartphone beats the Samsung Galaxy S22 Ultra, when it comes to shutter lag. To be mentioned, the former packs an HM6 image sensor, while the latter is powered by ISOCELL HM3.

Join SammyFans on Telegram

As shown in the video, Ice repeatedly tapped the camera shutter button of the Redmi K50 Ultra smartphone, and it continues capturing images per tap. On the other hand, when Ice used the Galaxy S22 Ultra and followed the same shutter taps, it just got defeated by its Chinese rival.

Download SammyFans App

Watch Galaxy S22 Ultra vs Redmi K50 Ultra camera speed video, below:

The video can easily disappoint any Samsung consumer as we can see how the Galaxy S22 Ultra gets failed when the user continuously taps the shutter button in a very short delay. The camera test video shows Galaxy S22 Ultra shutter speed recorded in slow motion, you can now understand the level of failure.

8 Plus Gen 1 or HM6?

There are two main factors that affected the shutter lag including different image sensors and system on chip (processor). While the Galaxy S22 Ultra uses the Snapdragon 8 Gen 1 chip, the Redmi K50 Ultra is powered by its overclocked version – Snapdragon 8 Plus Gen 1.

We saw Qualcomm is ready to give orders for the next-gen Snapdragon flagship processor to TSMC instead of Samsung. The main reason is that the 4nm process technology of Samsung got failed this time, as both Exynos 2200 and Snapdragon 8 Gen 1 reportedly have multiple issues.

As Chinese smartphone manufacturers are coming to the contest, Samsung needs to work on its development and innovations. Ahead of creating new ones, the Korean tech giant should fix all the issues with basic features that consumers use the most like camera.

| Source |

Exit mobile version