The iPhone 14 Pro has one of the best smartphone camera systems money can buy, but it still has its limitations. | Photo by Amelia Holowaty Krales / The Verge
Thereâs the smell of sizzling sausage, car exhaust, and late-season playoff hopes in the air on Tuesday night as I cross the street toward the stadium. Iâm carrying a neon green Mariners fanny pack across my chest (thatâs how the kids are wearing them, right?!?) loaded with the essentials: my ID, Kleenex, a Samsung Galaxy S22 Ultra, and an iPhone 14 Pro. The roof of T-Mobile Park hangs open over the adjacent railway, looming like the Death Star, and I head toward an entrance with a few things on my agenda, in no particular order:
Cheer on the Mariners as they definitely hopefully please dear god end a 20-year playoff drought (Editorâs Note: They did, in fact, end the drought last night)
Collect the Mariners-branded flannel shirt my ticket entitles me to (we like to keep things on-brand here in Seattle)
Test out the cameras on the 14 Pro and S22 Ultra
Figure out if Iâm wearing this fanny pack right
I chose these two phones in particular because theyâre two of the best you can buy right now. They also present significantly different camera feature sets, and Iâm curious which Iâll like using better over the course of the evening. The 14 Pro has more of a âhelps you take nice pictures with minimal effortâ vibe, while the S22 Ultra takes a maximalist âyou want cameras? here, have fiveâ approach. The 10x zoom on the Ultra has really impressed me in the past, but Iâm curious to see how it holds up with glowing stadium lights and distant action on the field.
A 10x zoom lets you take advantage of some news views of downtown on the walk to the stadium. Taken with the S22 Ultra.
The 14 Pro doesnât have the raw telephoto reach of the S22 Ultra, but then, I like how it processes photos in general better than the S22. Will that make it more useful overall? Or will I be annoyed by its limited zoom range? I would have brought more phones, probably, but Iâm limited to what I can carry in this fanny pack.
On top of all that, the Mariners are coming off a dismal road trip in which they lost a string of extremely winnable games, casting an all-too-familiar shadow of doubt on our chances of snagging a wild card spot. With about a week left of regular season play, they canât afford to lose any more easy games.
Taken with the iPhone 14 Pro. We may have the longest running playoff drought in professional sports, but hey, look at the views from the stadium!
Before the game starts, I spend some time on a 300-level pavilion with sweeping views of Elliott Bay and downtown Seattle. The early evening sun even peeks through the âOâ in T-Mobile for a brief Stonehenge-like moment. With the S22 Ultraâs 10x zoom, I can get shots of the downtown skyline that the 14 Proâs 3x zoom canât touch. Even in wide-angle shots, it captures detail that the 14 Proâs noise reduction would smooth into oblivion. But then again, the Ultraâs photos of my Stonehenge moment have that cursed Thomas Kinkade over-HDRed look about them, and I much prefer how the 14 Pro handles that situation. Win some, lose some.
During the game, itâs a similar story: sometimes I prefer the Ultra and sometimes the 14 Pro. Sure, getting a telephoto shot from the stands of Seattle starting pitcher Robbie Rayâs delivery is cool in theory, but the results arenât very inspiring. Highlights are blown out and details are obviously lacking. Itâs just too challenging of a situation for this tiny sensor and lens.
I grab a portrait of my friend modeling the included-with-ticket-purchase flannel shirt with the 14 Pro; I like its 2x portrait focal length better than the 1x or 3x options Samsung provides, but it cuts around her curly hair clumsily. The S22 Ultra probably would have done better with subject isolation, but at that point, Iâd made my friend sit still long enough that I didnât bother. I want to be wowed, but up against these (admittedly, very challenging) conditions, theyâre just underwhelming.
Thereâs not much more excitement on the field, either. The seasonâs breakout star Julio RodrĂguez is on the injured list, and so apparently is the rest of the Marinersâ offense. I sit through a grueling seven innings as the Mariners manufacture zero runs and make the Texas Rangersâ pitching look Cy Young-worthy. If none of those words made sense to you, then just know that the Mariners got shut out 5â0, and the game was every bit as disappointing as the score suggests.
I walked myself and my fanny pack of phones back to the light rail station, grateful for my flannel in the early fall evening air. A string of losses in late September shouldnât put so much of a damper on what has otherwise been an electric season. The baseball season is long and physically demanding â who can reasonably expect a team to keep up a pace of improbable come-from-behind wins all the way from start to finish?
Similarly, I feel a little guilty about my disappointment with the two phones I tested out that night. Theyâre both little technological marvels in their own way â culminations of decades of advances in mobile technology and digital imaging. Ten years ago, I wouldnât have dreamed of getting these kinds of photos with a phone camera. I feel I ought to give them a little more credit, even though they underperformed in this particular situation.
Theyâre the best of the best (and should be, at over $1,000 each). The fact they struggle under these circumstances is only because nobody â not Apple, Samsung, or anyone else â has figured out how to build a smartphone camera that meets every need. If nothing else, I have a new warm shirt to wear as I listen to the Mariners play through their remaining scheduled games from the comfort of home. The next time I attend a game in person, I might have to break out my dedicated camera and a telephoto lens. I just have to figure out how to get it into that stadium-security-approved fanny pack.