Honor Magic7 RSR vs. Magic7 Pro camera comparison

The Honor Magic7 RSR Porsche Design is a special edition phone born out of the cooperation between Honor and Porsche Design. However, beyond the tweaks to hardware and software design, there are a couple of intriguing differences in the camera hardware that can potentially elevate the image quality even further than the great level that the regular Honor Magic7 Pro already provides.

We didn't spend too much time examining the image quality in our Honor Magic7 RSR review because we thought the camera quality was already good enough and it's entirely beyond the point when you are getting a designer phone, but we got so many requests about this comparison by our review readers that here it is.
Honor Magic7 Pro • Honor Magic7 RSR Porsche Design
Both phones have a similar triple camera setup. A 50MP main camera with a variable aperture, a 200MP 3x camera, and a 50MP ultrawide camera with AF. The front camera is a 50MP AF unit with a 3D ToF system. However, the devil is in the details, as they say.
- Wide (main): 50MP Omnivision OV50K (1/1.3", 1.2µm- 2.4µm), f/1.4-f/2.0, 24mm, multi-directional PDAF, OIS; 4K@60fps, LiDAR autofocus
- Telephoto: 200MP Samsung ISOCELL HP3 (S5KHP3, 1/1.4", 0.56µm - 2.24µm), f/1.88, 72mm (70mm native), multi-directional PDAF, OIS; 4K@60fps
- Ultrawide: 50MP Omnivision OV50D (1/2.88", 0.61µm - 1.22µm), f/2.0, 12mm (122˚), PDAF; 4K@60fps
- Front camera: 50MP Sony IMX 816 (LYT500?, 1/2.93" 0.6µm - 1.2µm), f/2.0, 21mm, PDAF; 4K@60fps
You see, Honor has allegedly changed the main camera sensor on the Magic7 RSR. It's supposed to be Omnivision OV50K instead of the OV50H. Honor did the same sensor switch for the Magic6 Pro/Magic6 RSR. The OV50K has the same optical format (size), but it is supposed to produce a better dynamic range - up to 15EV, according to Omnivision.
Additionally, the 200MP 3x periscope zoom camera on the Magic7 RSR now comes with a larger f/1.88 aperture, which works out to a whole stop of light of difference compared to the Magic7 Pro's f/2.6 aperture. This also means the lens' depth of field should be shallower now, too, giving you stronger background defocus (bokeh).
We were also surprised to discover that the Magic7 RSR's lens has a different native focal length (70mm) than the Magic7 Pro's (60mm). Regardless of this, both phones produce photos at 72mm focal length (the so-called 3x zoom), which means the Magic7 Pro does a bit more upscaling to get there than the Magic7 RSR. You can only get the photos at the native focal length when you shoot in the full-res mode (200MP) - this has been the default approach since the Magic6 Pro series.
And finally, Honor has also added a LiDAR sensor on the Magic7 RSR to help with video autofocusing - they say it's much better with high-framerate videos of up to 60fps but that one is quite hard to test objectively so we'll skip it in the section below.
Camera samples
Here are a few scenes shot with the main cameras of the two phones in trying to gauge if there was any difference in dynamic range, even though it's not like the standard Magic7 Pro was lacking in that respect. We deliberately shot some challenging high-contrast scenes in our hopes to let the RSR version shine. As it turned out, making out differences between the two phones in dynamic range specifically proved quite difficult.
This was already the case when we compared the Magic6 Pro to the Magic6 RSR so there is no surprise here.
Daylight photo samples, 1x: Magic7 RSR PD • Magic7 Pro
The wider aperture on the Magic7 RSR camera was not expected to do much for image quality during the day, and indeed, we struggled to see any consistent differences between the two cameras. A few shots came out with slightly different definition or micro-contrast, but we didn't observe it in other photos, so it's hard to draw conclusions.
Daylight photo samples, 3x: Magic7 RSR PD • Magic7 Pro
The difference in the lens apertures, however, becomes more obvious with close-ups - the depth of field is shallower on the Magic7 RSR, and the background blur level is higher.
Daylight photo samples, 3x: Magic7 RSR PD • Magic7 Pro
That does make the Magic7 RSR better suited to portraiture thanks to the improved separation between subject and background.
People shots, 3x: Magic7 RSR PD • Magic7 Pro
You're welcome to go ahead and do some pixel-peeping in the 6x shots below as well.
Daylight photo samples, 6x: Magic7 RSR PD • Magic7 Pro
We also went out for some low-light samples - here's a comparison between the main cameras.
Low-light photo samples, 1x: Magic7 RSR PD • Magic7 Pro
You can also check out how the 3x telephotos compare in the dark. This telephoto camera comparison was expected to be most interesting.
Low-light photo samples, 3x: Magic7 RSR PD • Magic7 Pro
And finally, a few side-by-side shots at 6x.
Low-light photo samples, 6x: Magic7 RSR PD • Magic7 Pro
Camera verdict
Overall, we didn't see any meaningful difference between the two phones' main cameras. For what that's worth, we even found the Magic7 Pro's main cam sharper after dark.
The wider aperture on the Magic7 RSR telephoto camera held the greater potential for producing meaningful improvements. We certainly enjoyed the shallower depth of field as it produced much more pronounced background defocus and subjects stand out better. However, in low light, we struggled to find any differences in image rendition. Even though the Magic7 RSR's camera consistently had the luxury of using a lower ISO value, both cameras resolved an identical level of detail and had identical noise levels.

In the end, we really enjoyed the Magic7 RSR design (as polarizing as it might be), the longer battery life and the wide aperture telephoto. We think the Honor Magic7 RSR Porsche Design can actually be considered an upgraded version of the Magic7 Pro (a Plus model, if you will) - it's the question we've been asking ourselves this whole time.
The Honor Magic7 RSR Porsche Design launches at €1,799 (£1,549 in the UK) and whether those features can justify the RSR's price premium over the already pretty solid (and not too affordable) Magic7 Pro will be up to you. In any case, this larger aperture telephoto camera is really something, and we wish we could see it in more mainstream devices too - maybe next year, Honor?
Honor Magic7 Pro
Related
Reader comments
- O
- 02 Mar 2025
- J9A
I think you need your eyes checked. The RSR images are really over-exposed, display very poor sharpness in many of the photos and lack detail. The 7 Pro are underexposed in some photos, but across the board have better detail and sharpness - in som...
- Michalis
- 28 Feb 2025
- iGs
Do y'all hate your jobs over there at GSM? There's a night and day difference between the night samples of the telephoto, with the f/1.9 clearly letting in a lot more light and detail. This reads like something that was hastily written by s...
- vik457
- 28 Feb 2025
- LfV
There isn't a succesor to ov50h/ov50k yet and the biggest advantage lyt-818 over them is tcg, but in dcg mode it might have same or even smaller dynamic range.