@@EllEmm149 yeah somehow but its like that. I tried to see video in iphone shot on iphone and same video on pixel shot on pixel. Once you watch side by side there is some huge difference in color processing in video however seeing alone iphone video feels right. Its just how each processes video colors. However with pictures its not that kind of difference and picture comparison is in the end of video if you want to see that too.
I don't think there's any contest here, in terms of the videos. The iPhone maybe does better with the stabilization, but the detail and the colors of the Pixel 9 Pro just blow the iPhone 16 Pro out of the water. I think the photos are a much closer contest. There were some pictures I thought the Pixel did better, and some I thought the iPhone did better.
@@BrianHartman The real colors were closer to google pixel as fall colors were really vibrant. Iphone colors were generally muted much more than what it was in the real and i got to know once i saw the video on my computer. I dont know why it was like that with the iphone and we should wait for future updates if apple does anything with the camera.
@@Cactuspractice12 Very well said thats what i understood always with the apple and this time i think hdr is very aggressive on 16 pro's which is causing additional wash out of colors but like you said that can be corrected in post.
@@KEG_1995 No i didnt used boost mode Pixel 9 pro. I tried to keep test as fair as possible and kept on both devices on standard settings. I think HDR is very aggressive with iphone that makes colors wash out. But we'll wait and see what apple brings in future updates.
@@AT-Runs That's true. they are both pretty great. But as a Pixel user, I am annoyed with the heavy contrast and ultra-processed look of the Pixel. More so in the videos. I miss the time when smartphone cameras did not process stuff so much.
I can't help but think you may have done something inadvertently with the settings on the iPhone 😂. And I'm typing from the #P9P 😆
@@EllEmm149 I had to go and check back again settings on iphone after your comment 😂 and i can confirm that its on standard settings.
@@AT-Runs oh okay 👍🏻 LoL, this is probably the first time I've seen an iPhone video look like this 😳
@@EllEmm149 yeah somehow but its like that. I tried to see video in iphone shot on iphone and same video on pixel shot on pixel. Once you watch side by side there is some huge difference in color processing in video however seeing alone iphone video feels right. Its just how each processes video colors. However with pictures its not that kind of difference and picture comparison is in the end of video if you want to see that too.
@@AT-Runs pro tip; watch it on a bigger screen/computer Imho
Google 👍
@@Yeasin_1M Yep 👍
I don't think there's any contest here, in terms of the videos. The iPhone maybe does better with the stabilization, but the detail and the colors of the Pixel 9 Pro just blow the iPhone 16 Pro out of the water.
I think the photos are a much closer contest. There were some pictures I thought the Pixel did better, and some I thought the iPhone did better.
@@BrianHartman The real colors were closer to google pixel as fall colors were really vibrant. Iphone colors were generally muted much more than what it was in the real and i got to know once i saw the video on my computer. I dont know why it was like that with the iphone and we should wait for future updates if apple does anything with the camera.
@@AT-Runs Yeah, if the iPhone did that bad a job with the fall colors in the video, then Apple really needs to fix that.
@@BrianHartman Indeed!
out of the box apple colours could almost be described as depressing and washed out, but you can more easily tweak that using photo styles
@@Cactuspractice12 Very well said thats what i understood always with the apple and this time i think hdr is very aggressive on 16 pro's which is causing additional wash out of colors but like you said that can be corrected in post.
But the colors are the most realistic.
Was video boost enabled on the pixel?
@@KEG_1995 No i didnt used boost mode Pixel 9 pro. I tried to keep test as fair as possible and kept on both devices on standard settings. I think HDR is very aggressive with iphone that makes colors wash out. But we'll wait and see what apple brings in future updates.
@@AT-Runs Video boost helps reduce the heavy contrast, which I like. But, I believe most people prefer the opposite.
@@achyutarjun Thats a good suggestion will try that.
Best colours on right
@@aleksandersiz8981 yes colors are so popping on pixel. Iphone being so muted with colors in some conditions but you can always adjust in post.
Dude that pixel tho
@@hectorrise308 indeed.
Ughhh…the colours and contrast on the right looks 🤮🤮🤮 so unnatural
@@achyutarjun Colors are always subjective. Just get what feels right to you. Both are great devices when it comes to camera. Cheers 😄!
@@AT-Runs That's true. they are both pretty great. But as a Pixel user, I am annoyed with the heavy contrast and ultra-processed look of the Pixel. More so in the videos. I miss the time when smartphone cameras did not process stuff so much.
@@achyutarjun I assume mainly because now more and more consumers want social media ready stuff and saves one more additional step towards editing.