Vivo is expected to unveil the Vivo X300 series of flagship phones in October in China. The brand has started to gradually reveal details about the X300 lineup. Today, Vivo Product Manager Han Boxiao officially confirmed the details of the Vivo X300’s primary camera. Additionally, reliable tipster Digital Chat Station shared key details about the phone’s periscope telephoto and ultra-wide cameras.
Vivo X300 primary camera details confirmed

The Vivo X300 will feature a 200-megapixel main camera, which is an upgraded version of the Samsung HP9 sensor. Instead of calling it HP10, it is dubbed the HPB, where the “B” stands for Blue, as it is exclusively tailored for the Vivo brand.

This 1/1.4-inch large sensor supports 23mm 200-megapixel ultra-clear output as well as 50mm 50MP high-resolution shots, while also offering CIPA 4.5-level optical image stabilisation. To further improve clarity, the module features blue glass and Zeiss T* coating for better control of glare and ghosting. This new camera sensor replaces the Sony IMX921 primary camera that was used on the Vivo X200 last year.
Vivo X300 periscope, ultra-wide camera details emerge

According to tipster Digital Chat Station, on the periscope telephoto side, Vivo uses the Sony IMX885, a 1/2-inch sensor paired with a 70mm 3X optical zoom lens. Unlike the ship-style periscope designs seen in some competitors, this one uses a light-folding prism structure and even supports telephoto macro photography.
Rounding out the system is a 50-megapixel ultra-wide camera. Rumours suggest that it could feature the Samsung JN1 or JN5 camera sensor.
As for the Vivo X300 Pro, leaks have revealed that it will feature a Sony LYT-828 50-megapixel primary camera, a 50-megapixel ultra-wide lens, and a 200-megapixel periscope telephoto camera.
The Vivo X300 and X300 Pro are expected to debut as the world’s first Dimensity 9500-powered phones next month (October).
For more daily updates, please visit our News Section.
Stay ahead in tech! Join our Telegram community and sign up for our daily newsletter of top stories.
Comments