Hands-on with the Pixel 9 Pro’s camera
# Google Pixel 9 Pro: A Comprehensive Review
The first thing you need to know about Google's new **Pixel 9 Pro** is that it looks nice and feels nice too. While I’ll dive into all of its photo features in a moment, I want to start by talking about how different the Pixel 9 Pro feels in your hand compared to previous Pixel models. Instead of the more rounded-out design of years past, Google squared off the metal rails for both the oblong camera bar and the phone's frame. This not only makes it look more like an iPhone but also creates a device that’s slightly easier to hold. In fact, this slight hardware change actually improves the camera experience as well—simply because the phone is just easier to hold and therefore easier to take photos and videos with.
Of course, this is Google, so we know that 90% of what’s new in this phone is going to be software. Let’s talk about what’s new on that front. I only had a few hours to test the Pixel 9 Pro’s triple rear camera system, which features a **50 megapixel wide lens**, a **48 megapixel telephoto photo lens**, and a **48 megapixel ultra-wide lens**. The very first thing I wanted to test was switching between these lenses while filming video.
The Pixel 8 Pro was notoriously bad at keeping consistent colors across lenses while filming, but in my short time with the Pixel 9 Pro, I noticed that the color shifting issue has been greatly reduced. Another issue with the Pixel 8 Pro’s camera was the visible framing shifts during lens changes. Without applying **Video Boost**, which sends video files to the cloud to be processed, those jumps are still slightly noticeable. However, if you run the clip through Video Boost, those jarring transitions are smoothed right over.
Video Boost also now allows video to be upresed to 8K and can pull **30-megapixel stills** from video. Unfortunately, I didn’t have time to test this extensively, so you’ll have to wait for the full review.
Now, let’s talk about the flashiest feature coming to the Pixel 9 Pro’s camera: a feature called **“Add Me.”** The idea behind it is that when someone takes a group photo, they don’t get to be in it. Google created software that can combine multiple photos to add them in. When Person A opens the “Add Me” feature on the Pixel 9 Pro, the camera system begins scanning the scene for people and creates a depth map of where everyone is. That’s why you’re instructed to move the camera to scan the area. After the first photo is taken, Person A swaps with Person B (who was just in the group photo). Person B is then instructed to align the frame with the shot Person A took and take another photo. The software then saves all of these photos, including the one with Person A stitched into the photo they took.
We tried it several times, and it worked about 50% of the time. While I think this is a great idea—especially as someone who’s always taking the photos—it takes time to complete, which makes it feel a lot like a magic trick. It’s one that you’ll use a few times and absolutely impress your friends with. But ultimately, it might be easier to just flip the camera around and take a selfie instead, especially considering the front-facing camera is now **42 megapixels**, up from just **10.5 megapixels** on the Pixel 8 Pro.
Oh my God—I look sweaty!
Other software tricks coming to the Pixel 9 Pro are **text prompting** and **autoframing** features in Magic Editor. Magic Editor is Google’s name for its AI photo editing tools, which previously allowed you to move subjects, erase objects, change skies, or select different facial expressions on people in a photo. Now, Google is adding the ability to prompt changes via text—for example, you can select an area you’d like to change (like the background of a photo) and then type in the alteration you’d like to see. There’s also a new feature called **“Autoframe,”** which can reframe a photo in order to make it more visually appealing based on photography principles such as the rule of thirds.
Again, I didn’t get a ton of time to play with this, but I do love text prompting because it allows you to have far more control over what sort of AI changes the system is making. I’m really stoked to test more of that. But the biggest change in this camera system is that Google has entirely redesigned the **HDR Plus image pipeline**. An image pipeline is responsible for the signature look of a camera—it does everything from analyzing skin tones to adding sharpness to small objects like tree leaves and deciding how much contrast everything in the scene should have.
I’m going to be really excited to put the Pixel 9 Pro next to the Pixel 8 Pro to see if there’s a noticeable difference here. So that’s the Pixel 9 Pro’s camera, and this year, the Pro system actually comes in two sizes: there’s a **6.2-inch Pixel 9 Pro**, which is going to be $1,000, and there’s a **6.8-inch Pixel 9 Pro XL**, which is going to be $1,100.
When I finally get my hands on one, I’m going to be most interested in testing out the video capabilities—it’s something that Google has always struggled with. But with Video Boost, they’ve been able to right a lot of their previous wrongs like the jarring lens switches and color changes. I’m ready to put that to the test. Let me know what else you want me to be testing out when I dive deeper into this camera system.
I appreciate you so much, bud. I hope you’re well, and I’ll see you in the next one.
** Mandatory Becca dog shot!** Yeah, look at the good friends—oh, they look hot! Those are some hot dogs, sheesh!