Skip to main content

The camera on this Android phone is confusing, but I love it

A person holding the Tecno Camon 30 Premier, showing the back of the phone.
Andy Boxall / Digital Trends

I’m all for a lot of detail, and love to hear about the new technology that’s inside a smartphone I’m about to test, but when I have to search for an explanation of what something means, it’s not a good start. The Tecno Camon 30 Premier suffers from this problem, as it has a lot of cool camera tech that is explained in a mystifying way.

So, I thought the best thing to do was to just ignore the tech speak and find out if it takes great photos the old-fashioned way.

What’s the problem?

The Tecno Camon 30 Premier's screen.
Andy Boxall / Digital Trends

The Tecno Camon 30 Premier has four cameras — on the rear, there’s a Sony IMX890 50-megapixel main camera, a 50MP wide-angle and macro camera, and a 50MP portrait camera, while on the front is another 50MP camera with autofocus and eye-tracking. It sounds good and also perfectly understandable. It’s all driven by Tecno’s new PolarAce imaging system, which has a Sony CXD5622G imaging chip at its heart that is apparently the first to provide “end-side FP16 floating-point computing with the power of 4.6TFLOPS@FP16.”

This doesn’t really mean anything to me, but it does apparently drive certain features that are somewhat understandable, such as 4K resolution AI-NR HDR video recording at 30 frames per second (fps), 4K portrait video, and 4K Ultra-night Vision video. It all sounds very specific and perfect for those classy demo scenes with beautifully lit beautiful people in beautiful locations, but what does it really mean when I’m taking photos and shooting videos at all other times?

The back of the Tecno Camon 30 Premier.
Andy Boxall / Digital Trends

It’s definitely the tech that makes the Camon 30 Premier’s camera special, but it does appear to be very video-centric and, therefore, potentially slightly limiting. Before we get into the camera, there are a few other things to know about the new phone first. It has a MediaTek Dimensity 8200 Ultimate processor and 12GB of RAM.

There’s a 6.77-inch AMOLED screen with a 120Hz refresh rate, a 5,000mAh battery with 70-watt wired charging, and an unusual suede-like, fake-leather-ish cover over the sculpted, swooping rear panel. See the little red dot above the camera? It’s a notification light for charging status and incoming calls. It’s a good design and a strong overall specification, so do the phone and camera live up to all these impressive-sounding specs?

Taking photos with the Camon 30 Premier

The Tecno Camon 30 Premier's camera.
Andy Boxall / Digital Trends

First, an apology. I didn’t notice the annoying watermark was on by default and only discovered it ruining the photos when I took them off the phone and put them on my computer. Still, at least you know these images were absolutely taken with the Tecno Camon 30 Premier, and I haven’t cheated and used a different phone for some reason. Secondly, as this is only an early hands-on test with the phone, we’re only looking at stills today.

On the positive side, the Camon 30 Premier’s camera has a pleasing, natural tone but also isn’t afraid to boost the saturation to create a striking photo. You can also capture a beautiful depth of field even with the main camera out of portrait mode. The 3x optical zoom shows plenty of detail and uses HDR to great effect. It’s clearly a capable camera, and I haven’t really explored all its ability yet, or taken a good look at video performance.

However, the software is very heavy-handed in some shots, using a lot of smoothing to reduce noise and artificially increase detail. This is very obvious in lowlight, even indoors. The photo of the church organ pipes — taken in a very dark corner of a church — looks great at a glance, but when you get closer, the boards on either side of the door appear blank where the software has smoothed them out. The pipes also lack texture and realism.

But I almost don’t care, as I’ve played around with the camera enough to really enjoy taking photos with it and have found it is capable enough to indulge me when I try to get creative. I may not really understand what Tecno’s going on about with its description of the PolarAce imaging system, and even whether it’s making any difference when taking still photos, but when the results are what I hoped for — and they are — I can forgive it.

Plenty of promise

The Tecno Camon 30 Premier’s camera has promise, and we’ll take a more in-depth look at its ability in the near future. How about the rest of the phone? It’s certainly unique, with the metal chassis extending only over the top edge of the rear and Tecno’s “Tech-Art” leather material in the Snowy Silver color seen in our photos. The phone is 7.9mm thick at its thinnest point, but the flat sides and additional thickness around the camera make it feel larger. Oddly, it feels lighter than the 210-gram weight suggests.

Tecno calls the 6.77-inch LTPO AMOLED its best screen yet, and it’s certainly bright and colorful, with a more vivid appearance than that of the Samsung Galaxy A55, which I directly compared it to. However, the Galaxy A55’s speakers have a fuller, bass-heavy sound than the Camon 30 Premier’s stereo speakers. It could be possible to alter the sound profile, but the Settings app keeps crashing when I try to access the sound menu.

I haven’t put my SIM card in the Camon 30 Premier to test the Android 14 and HiOS interface, but enjoyed using it on the Tecno Pova 6 Pro I lived with recently. The crashing Settings app puts me off a bit, though. However, I am using the phone ahead of its final release.

The Camon 30 Premier also refused to charge when I used an Apple USB-C charger, which regularly charges other devices, but it was fine when I tried a lower-power Anker charger, along with its own included 70W charger. These are small concerns, but not a great welcome to a brand new phone.

Excitement, tempered?

A person holding the Tecno Camon 30 Premier.
Andy Boxall / Digital Trends

When Tecno talked about the PolarAce imaging system during Mobile World Congress (ACE), there was plenty of buzz and attention around it, and we were keen to test the system out. The company has come out with a variety of interesting, unusual, and surprisingly capable camera phones, and it appeared to be taking the new Camon 30 Premier very seriously indeed.

The result so far is an intriguing camera that clearly has a distinct look to its photos and potentially some exciting video features just waiting to be tested out. However, using the camera for stills shows that it’s good, but not always outstanding, with the software sometimes spoiling the image. We’re going to persevere with the Camon 30 Premier’s camera, as it is packed with different features and some of the stills have really impressed.

The back of the Tecno Camon 30 Premier.
Andy Boxall / Digital Trends

Tecno doesn’t sell its smartphones in the U.S. or the U.K., so you’ll have to work hard to get one. It’ll be out in May, with the price set to vary depending on where it’s released. The camera and the design make it tempting, but when I’ve already found a pretty annoying bug in the software after using it without a SIM card for the afternoon, it may be worth holding off before putting in some serious effort to get one right now.

If you’re looking for a new phone today, we’d suggest getting one from this list instead.

Andy Boxall
Andy is a Senior Writer at Digital Trends, where he concentrates on mobile technology, a subject he has written about for…
T-Mobile is getting rid of its misleading ‘Price Lock’ policy
T-Mobile CEO Mike Sievert standing in front of a banner that reads Internet Freedom.

T-Mobile just got into some trouble with the National Advertising Program (NAD), a part of the BBB National Programs, an independent non-profit organization, for advertising its supposed “Price Lock” policy for 5G internet service.

Basically, the premise behind the “Price Lock” was a promise not to increase prices for customers who were on the Un-Contract Promise: “Starting January 18, 2024, customers activating or switching to an eligible rate plan get our Price Lock guarantee that only you can change what you pay—and we mean it!”

Read more
The Honor 200 Pro is unlike any other Android phone I’ve used in 2024
The Honor 200 Pro smartphone lying on a rock outside.

Standing out in the smartphone world is mighty difficult in 2024. When giants like Apple and Samsung hog so much of the spotlight and refuse to let go, how do other phones ensure they don't get overlooked? In the case of the Honor 200 Pro, it does so by being wildly unique.

After launching in China at the end of May, Honor just launched the Honor 200 Pro internationally. I've been using it for the last couple of weeks, and it has a few distinct features that make it unlike any other smartphone I've used so far in 2024.
Have you ever seen a phone like this?

Read more
2 reasons why you shouldn’t buy a Motorola phone in 2024
Someone holding the Moto G Power 5G (2024) and Moto G Stylus 5G (2024).

A few years ago, buying a Moto G phone was the thing to do if you wanted a quality Android phone on a budget. Starting with the first Moto G from 2013, it's a product line with a lot of history. Much of it is good, but in more recent years, there's been some bad, too.

Motorola's approach to the Moto G has been worrisome, especially in 2024. By March, the company had already announced and released three new Moto G models, none of which were particularly good. From low-quality displays, poor performance, bad cameras, and more, it felt like Motorola had lost its budget phone mojo.

Read more