– All right, so right off the top, I'm just gonna say it. Most people don't upgrade their phones every single year, right? Of course, smartphones have been commoditized and they're everywhere, but it's to the point where now people basically can pick and choose when they feel like they wanna upgrade. It's like cars. Do people buy the new Toyota Camry every single year? No, of course not. But a new one comes out every single year, and every single new one is a little bit better than the last one so that when people with older cars finally do decide to upgrade, they can upgrade to the newest one. So relentlessly comparing this year's Camry with last year's Camry is not so that people who just got last year's car can decide if they wanna upgrade or not.
I mean, they can, but let's face it, that's a pretty small number of people. But it's more of a comparison for context. It's to put it alongside something that you already know. And so that's what I'm gonna do with this year's iPhone review. Because let's face it, if you already have an iPhone 12, you can skip the 13. Pretty easy. But there's a lot of other things that have changed about this phone for people with older phones. And if you're considering an iPhone 13. ♪ I know we're not listened to, but ♪ (upbeat music) ♪ Woo ♪ ♪ Hey ♪ What's up? MKBHD here. This is the iPhone 13 and the 13 mini. So the funny thing about keeping the same design as last year is people can immediately dismiss it as a pretty minor update. Which it is, let's be clear. The phone looks and feels and operates almost exactly the same as last year, just with a few extra grams so it feels a little more dense in the hand, and a quarter of a millimeter of extra thickness. But also, they did happen to do their three biggest upgrades on the 13 on the three most important parts of a phone: the screen, the battery, and the cameras.
It was pretty good for a minor update. I also like this design a lot already anyway, so I'm kind of glad it's the same mostly with the squared up design, the matte aluminum rails. I'll be reviewing the 13 Pro as well pretty soon and that build is a little more different But yeah, same Lightning port down here at the bottom, same speakers, there's a slightly lower button placement, and the cameras, which I'll definitely get to, have a diagonal orientation now. But let's be real, most of you will be putting a case on the phone anyway, so you probably won't notice any of these things for more than a second. Aside from maybe the new colors, which I got to say, I'm not normally a blue phone guy, but I have been liking this new blue.
So the one part you may or may not care about is the notch at the top. Yes, it is smaller, but here's how it's smaller. It's all the same sensors, all the same Face ID stuff, same selfie camera, but they've rearranged them and compressed them a bit and the earpiece is now up top in the middle. So the total area is about 20-ish percent smaller, maybe a little more, but that's entirely in left to right savings. The new notch is actually slightly taller than last year, which is evidenced by the fact that it pokes into full screen videos slightly more. But you know, honestly, this doesn't really matter much. The display being brighter is kind of nice, but the extra real estate, Apple didn't really do anything with it.
It's the same icons up top. There is no battery percentage option. The icons are the same size. They just rearranged the notch. Fine. We'll have to wait a little longer for Face ID to get any faster, or work out more angles, or for them to add maybe a Touch ID fingerprint reader underneath the glass, or an always-on display or any of that stuff. For now, pretty much the same familiar iPhone design. But the insides is where you start to see those upgrades. So there's a new chip inside. It's the A15 Bionic. It's a very powerful, fast, high-end chip again. And here's your benchmark scores to prove that. The new iPhone is zippy and quick as usual, but I'm actually more impressed by its efficiency.
So this year, they've combined the new chip with an actually physically larger battery, and that's why the phone is slightly thicker and heavier, but the results are actually incredible. The iPhone's battery life got way better. So Apple in their event was quoting 1 1/2 more hours of use in the 13 mini and 13 Pro, and then 2 1/2 more hours in the 13 and 13 Pro Max. We weren't exactly sure what that would mean or how that translate, but I am having a great battery experience with this phone. Five hours of screen on time without a problem. Six hours too pretty regularly before getting down into low battery and often creeping up towards seven. I only actually killed it in a day once during my testing with a heavy day with a lot of unplugged, max brightness navigation.
That'll do it. But also, my car has a wireless charger in it, so it's pretty hard now in my daily use to ever get worried about this phone's battery life. I'm convinced, I actually think I could go on a weekend trip and get two full days of light use out of this phone. That's a really big improvement. I don't think I've ever said that about an iPhone battery before. And the Pros are even better, even more impressive. So, battery is a meaningful change to something that everyone who gets this phone will actually care about. Now it still charges pretty slow, 20 watts over Lightning, 15 watts over MagSafe, and only 12 for the mini, and nothing else about this battery experience has changed. There is no split, superfast charging batteries or stronger magnets for MagSafe.
It's just the simple stuff, just straight up bigger battery, more efficient chip. Just works. If you were thinking about getting an iPhone mini, this would be the best year to do it just because number one, the battery life of the 12 mini was the weak point, and now it's much better. It goes from bad to perfectly normal. And this is suspected to be the last year that Apple does a mini iPhone for a while because of relatively weak sales. So this is probably the last of a dying breed of smallish pocketable phones with flagship specs and flagship cameras. So this is a good year to get the mini. So this year's iPhone is mostly about the cameras. iPhone 13 has all new cameras throughout the whole line, and there's both a noticeable difference in camera quality and camera features. So to hit on quality first, the sensors are all bigger and the primary camera now has the sensor-shift stabilization that was only in the Pro Max last year. That's why it's offset like this 'cause it's so much bigger.
And those new sensors have massive pixel sizes and they're letting in a ton of light. In regular lighting, it won't make a huge difference. I mean, they've been great for a while. So if anything, they're a little bit sharper, but it does mean I was actually able to observe slightly quicker shutter speeds in dim lighting versus the 12. So that's pretty sweet.
4K video also still looks pretty great. I expected to see maybe a noticeable difference in stabilization from this new sensor-shift stabilization, but it also looks about the same as last year. Again, it'll make more of a difference with low light and keeping that shutter speed fast. Also, sadly, there's still plenty of flaring in nighttime video. That hasn't gone away. The bigger quality jump comes with going to the 13 Pros. And I'll just say before I even make that video. The 13 Pro is the best camera system I've ever tested in a phone.
Just straight up, it is. Now with a slightly lesser ultra-wide and no telephoto, this one's not as good, but it's close. But yeah, it's pretty great. It could change in like a week or two whenever the Pixel 6 comes out, but I'm just telling you how I feel. But let's talk about the new features though, because I think they actually make a bigger difference than the quality difference. So there are some new camera features, number one is called Photographic Styles, and these are really interesting. So there's yet another new button in the Camera app. You hit the arrow to expand settings and there's this like multi-frame looking thing. And this lets you switch between five preset "Photographic Styles," as Apple calls them, that are all slightly but noticeably different. There's the Standard style, which looks like every other iPhone, pretty flat. But then there's Rich Contrast, Vibrant, Warm, and Cool.
So it says it's adjusting, as you can see, tone and warmth, and then you can fine-tune these even further with that slider to dial them in the way you like. And then once you do, you start taking pictures and that setting sticks. That picture profile will stay as many times as you close and open the Camera app until you go back in and change it again. So why is this so interesting? This look is baked in. It's not a filter on top of a neutral capture that you can change later.
No, this is a full-time adjustment to the actual processing of the photo. And so I realized, you know how the Pixel and the iPhone might have very similar daytime image quality, but someone like me constantly leans towards the Pixel because it's got this really nice, confident contrasty look. Well, now you can sort of adjust the tune of the iPhone's processing to look like the Pixel. This Rich Contrast picture style, to me, looks like the Pixel and it looks really good. I've been leaving it on full-time specifically because it does achieve that same look. It doesn't affect faces or skin tones too much, but the overall tone of the images is a bit darker in the shadows, a bit brighter in the highlights, and it retains all that information. And that makes a bigger difference to me in the iPhone's photo than the bigger sensor might on a lot of my shots. It really reminds me of picture profiles on like a mirrorless or DSLR camera. You've got PP1 or PP3, and each one of these picture profiles has a slightly different contrast curve and sharpness and color settings, and then you can take the edit from there.
But instead of PP1, PP2, PP3, you have Rich Contrast, which, to me, feels like the Pixel. You've got Vibrant mode, which maybe that's a Samsung phone. You've got warmer, you've got cooler, you can dial them the way you want. This tweaking of the photos tuning in the actual processing is really interesting to me. So it's curious that this isn't gonna be in older iPhones. I figured it's like a pretty straightforward thing for a single shot, but it's not. So this is iPhone 13 series only. But that's a pretty interesting feature. So then the other feature is in the video department and it's called Cinematic Mode. Okay, so there's a lot of talk about what this is exactly and what it's good for. So it is yet another new mode added to the camera. Now you've got portrait mode photos, regular photos, regular videos, and then Cinematic Mode shows up right next to that, which I believe most people, not you, of course, watching this review, but most people will take one glance at it and think, "Oh, okay, portrait mode video." Truth is, it's doing way more than that in the phone, but just to be blunt, it's not very good at any one of those things it's supposed to be doing.
So when I saw the iPhone was making Cinematic Mode, just from the name, I got really pumped because I like to advocate for starting to make videos on your smartphone. And the iPhone has already had the best quality video in any smartphone for a while now, even without going 8K. And so I was thinking, "Okay, this is gonna be the best way for creators to have the most control over their videos and make better stuff for their YouTube channel." 'Cause I know this isn't a Hollywood camera replacement. Let's be realistic. But yeah, Cinematic Mode for a YouTube creator sounds great. Well, first of all, Cinematic Mode is shooting Dolby Vision HDR, and is doing constant processing to add that fake blur behind subjects. It's like portrait mode but for every frame. That's a lot of processing. So it's limited and completely locked to 1080p 30fps. Checkmate 24fps Stans. Apple thinks cinematic mode is 30p. But also why isn't there a 24fps option? Not that I would use it, but that's less processing, right? And then you start shooting with it, and even if you can get over the kinda shaky focus tracking that's supposed to track faces and how hard it struggles in lower light, and the fact that you can't use the ultrawide at all, and the fact that the depth of field is only adjustable in post in Apple-made apps, there's just not enough manual control for me to consider this particularly cinematic.
Or maybe you can call it cinematic mode since the blur is all nice to look at, but maybe I was hoping for a manual mode. Or I know, maybe a pro mode, but that's still not here. I mean, the autofocus tracking is a pretty cool trick and it looks pretty dramatic and fun when you turn the blur all the way up. And sometimes it really does nail a focus transition when people look at the camera the right way and then look away from the camera at the right times. But if you're a creator looking to get started and use the iPhone as your only camera and really learn the fundamentals of audio levels and ISO and shutter speed and things like that, this ain't it. I'll leave a link to an app like FiLMiC Pro, for example, that still does a much better job with all of that stuff and then you still get the iPhone's video quality. But, yeah, Cinematic Mode for now is a really basic 1080p portrait mode video with a manual exposure slider. But it can get better from here. So I've made an entire video all about iOS 15 and the fresh new software features.
So if you wanna refresh on those, I'll link up below the like button. All of the newest iPhones are getting it right now and I've been using it for over a month now. I've enjoyed it. The most impactful new features, to me, have been the Focus Modes and the new notifications. So even though there are nowhere near as good as any Android phone, I am happy with the improved notification organization here. And the Focus Modes are nice. I do have a do not disturb, I have home, and work of course, a sleep one. And I got one specifically for when I'm shooting videos in the studio.
I have it on right now. Only Slack can get through to me. Otherwise, it's basically do not disturb mode. But, yeah, you can basically add as many as you want. It's always encouraging you to add another one and they're all triggered via unique different things. Like the workout one is triggered when I start a workout on my Apple Watch. Driving mode is triggered when you're moving a certain speed. So it's cool. It's all nice. And it syncs across all your devices really quickly. Feels kind of like a power user feature. And actually the feature that feels the absolute smartest was so smart that it got kind of annoying, it's funny. So you know how the Live Text feature finds text in images now and lets you click on that text, copy it and paste it and take action? Well, my habit when I'm holding the phone with one hand to zoom in on a photo is just double-tap and then it zooms in, but now there's so much text I've realized in so many of my photos that when I double-tap the photo, it just selects some texts I didn't even realize was there.
So I guess now my zoom habit is gonna have to be a pinch, which is sort of a two-finger action, but, yeah, minor complaint. Look, the iPhone 13 is a really good Camry, or a smartphone, I should say. They took a phone that was already damn good last year, didn't change much aesthetically, some new colors, whatever, and they changed the things that actually count the most to the final user: screen, battery, and cameras. And that's a pretty good minor update. It's funny the disappointment so many people have is, "It's called the 13 but it looks like the 12, and so it should have been called the 12S." But Apple's done with the S names.
And honestly, I wouldn't be shocked if it's not too long before they stopped giving it numbers altogether and it's just the new iPhone whatever calendar year it is. But all that being said, as much as many nice things, that I've said about this phone and as much as I'll probably actually be recommending it, for me, it's all about the Pros. So the iPhone 13 Pro review is coming very soon. That has an even better screen and even better cameras and more camera features. I think it's safe to call that the best camera in any phone, like I said, and even more impressive battery stuff too. So that review's coming up soon. Definitely get subscribed to see that when it comes out if you haven't already. But for now iPhone 13, it's a good Camry.
So, shout-out to channel sponsor dbrand for backing this video. As you may remember, I found out kinda the hard way that Ceramic Shield isn't invincible. Basically, rule number one of smartphone displays is over a long enough time, scratches are inevitable. And so the iPhone 13 is no exception. It's got the same Ceramic Shield as last year's iPhone 12. So if you wanna keep your iPhone looking clean, then dbrand's tempered glass screen protectors are out now. And I've got one installed here on this phone, which could only mean one thing. Got these keys here. These keys probably aren't gonna do that much damage, but let's try anyway. Let's give it a scratch. That doesn't do much. – [Zack] Looks like you'll need a set of these. – Ah, yes, of course. Thanks, Zack. Uh… Yeah, Moh's pick.
Let's go ahead and go straight to level 6 here. (screen scraping) Oh, I can kinda hear it now. And you can see this scratch is showing up. You probably already know where I'm going with this one. Scratches at level 6, with deeper grooves out at level 7. Wow, you can actually feel the difference. I feel like I get why Zack, I kinda get why you do this now. It's a little bit more fun than it should be. But same results as the iPhone, but a lot easier to replace because it's a screen protector.
Just pops right off. And the iPhone is good as new. So it's a no-brainer to protect your iPhone, especially 'cause they're so expensive. And there's also two included with every order. So if you wanna get in on this, the link is below. That's pretty much it. Thanks for watching. Catch you guys in the next one. Peace. (futuristic music)
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