Huawei Mate 40 Pro review
Low-light image quality
Shooting in low-light is no issue for the Mate 40 Pro, as expected. Night time shots have excellent dynamic range with particularly well developed shadows and lower midtones. Colors are nicely saturated, and the phone handles warm street light without the orange hue, we've seen all too often. Detail is great, finding any noise in a tall order.
Low-light samples, main camera (1x)
Photo mode performance is so good that going into Night mode you don't stand to gain too much. Perhaps the one benefit is the minor improvement in highlight development, but it's so small as to not be able to offset the increased shot-taking time and the combined effects of the long exposure and increased sharpening. We'd stick to Photo mode, really.
Low-light samples, main camera (1x), Night mode
The telephoto camera fares quite well in low light too. It needs some light to work with, but if gets it, it delivers sharp and detailed shots, noise-free once again. And, once again, dynamic range and colors are properly great. It's worth noting that in very dark conditions the Mate will default to the main cam for telephoto use and those pics do turn out pretty low quality, but you probably don't want to be shooting in such low light anyway.
Low-light samples, telephoto camera (5x)
Night mode guarantees the Mate will use the periscope module. Again, with the already great photo mode 5x zoom photos, its usefulness in most conditions is debatable, but it can salvage a shot in very bad lighting.
Low-light samples, telephoto camera (5x), Night mode
The ultra wide angle cam doesn't disappoint either. It's capable of exposing brighter than most competitors without significant quality sacrifices, giving it an edge in shadow development. A common theme across all Mate cameras - wide dynamic range and pleasing colors.
Low-light samples, ultra wide angle camera
Night mode shots from the ultra wide come out at 12MP and 4:3 aspect ratio, as opposed to the native 20MP and 3:2 ratio. So you'll be getting the sides cropped, making it for a not-very-ultra-wide frame. The drop in resolution compounds with the usual Night mode drop in fine detail to make for fairly unimpressive Night mode ultra wide shots. No worries, the photo mode ones are great anyway.
Low-light samples, ultra wide angle camera, Night mode
Low-light comparison - Mate 40 Pro vs. P40 Pro vs. Galaxy Note20 Ultra
We extended the impromptu comparison into the night as well. The Mate 40 Pro uses more or less the same main camera as the P40 Pro, but the end results are generally better, with wider dynamic range and notably improved shadow development - it outshines the Note in this respect as well. Both Huaweis have superior noise performance than the Note too, hardly a difference between the two.
1x comparison: Mate 40 Pro • P40 Pro • Note20 Ultra
The Mate's tendency for brighter shadows continues into zoomed in shooting where it also shows an improvement over the P40 Pro in terms of exposure and dynamic range. The Note is no match in either. The Huaweis are neck and neck for sharpness and detail, the Note trailing behind them.
5x comparison: Mate 40 Pro • P40 Pro • Note20 Ultra
The Note's ultra wide angle output in low light is almost embarrassing in this company - it's noisier and softer and lacking in fine detail in well lit areas and shadows alike. The Mate 40 Pro is again a couple of notches above the P40 Pro in terms of tonal development, though detail levels look on par to our eyes.
Ultra wide comparison: Mate 40 Pro • P40 Pro • Note20 Ultra
Once you're done with the real world samples, head over to our Photo compare tool to see how the Huawei Mate 40 Pro stacks up against the competition.
Huawei Mate 40 Pro against the Galaxy Note20 Ultra and the OnePlus 8 Pro in our Photo compare tool
Reader comments
- Niky Tamayo
- 18 May 2024
- DxW
Indeed. Still getting EMUI updates up till now. Security update last week, after a massive jump to EMUI 13 a few months back that added a whole bunch of connectivity features!
- Anonymous
- 21 Feb 2024
- vaS
While you lose on security updates, Google still updates anything related to them. Just like the HMS updates that Huawei does to anything they made past the sanctions. These people are just looking for excuses to buy a new phone.
- Anonymous
- 21 Feb 2024
- vaS
Too bad you didn't see Aurora Store.