Even though it鈥檚 February, I still constantly get the question: Should I buy the tricked-out 聽or its more affordable brother, the , both of which debuted last fall? My answer, almost exclusively, is the XR. It鈥檚 $250 cheaper and pretty much the same phone, especially when it comes to the camera. Anyone who needs the XS either has a dog (more on that in a bit) or just wants the fanciest Apple toy.
I鈥檝e come to love the XR because it has the same 12-megapixel sensor (the most important part of the camera) as the XS. It鈥檚 30 percent larger than what came in the X聽and is able to suck in more data for extremely detailed daylight photos, as well as pretty good low-light shots. The new sensor also comes with deeper pixels that create ultrarich colors.
Alongside the sensor, both phones also come with Smart HDR, or software that allows the phone to take a burst of photos with various exposures and then combine them into one perfectly defined photo with exceptional highlights and shadows. Additionally,聽both phones shoot great portraits and have a feature that lets you聽choose how much blur you want in the background after the fact, if you鈥檙e feeling fancy.
The main difference鈥攁nd one that鈥檚 not worth $250, in my opinion鈥攊s that the XS comes with a zooms聽lens in addition to a wide-angle lens, whereas聽the XR only has the wide-angle. The zoom does make slightly nicer portraits, because it鈥檚 longer and won鈥檛 warp your subject when you get close. And聽that second lens allows the XS to make blurry-background portraits of dogs聽and inanimate subjects, while the XR can only do that with humans since that鈥檚 all its software recognizes. Dog lovers might balk, but there are rumors that the XR will get a software upgrade down the road to fix the聽problem.
Finally, here鈥檚 the other part of the conversation that not many people acknowledge:聽no iPhone, not even the stupidly expensive iPhone XS Max, comes close to matching the power of a mirrorless or DSLR camera. The iPhones are great for on-the-go adventure shots you鈥檒l post to Instagram or text to your friends. But if you鈥檙e trying to create an image that鈥檚 more than 12 megapixels, or trying to snap聽a truly sharp photo in low light, or trying to zoom in farther than the XS lens, you shouldn鈥檛 be shooting with an iPhone anyway. For me聽that鈥檚 one more reason to save my money on the XR and spend that savings on something more powerful.