In October, Vivo is anticipated to introduce the Vivo X300 line of flagship phones in China. The company has begun to provide information on the X300 portfolio in a progressive manner. Vivo Product Manager Han Boxiao formally verified the Vivo X300’s primary camera specifications today. Furthermore, trustworthy tipster Digital Chat Station provided important information on the phone’s ultra-wide and periscope telephoto cameras.
The primary camera on the Vivo X300 is expected to feature a 200-megapixel sensor, an improved version of the Samsung HP9. Since it is specifically designed for the Vivo brand, it is referred to as the HPB—where the “B” stands for Blue—instead of HP10.
This 1/1.4-inch sensor has CIPA 4.5-level optical image stabilisation and can capture both 50mm 50MP high-resolution images and 23mm 200-megapixel ultra-clear output. The module features blue glass and a Zeiss T* coating, which enhances glare and ghosting control to improve clarity further. The Sony IMX921 primary camera, which was utilised on the Vivo X200 last year, has been replaced with this new camera sensor.
The Sony IMX885, a 1/2-inch sensor combined with a 70mm 3X optical zoom lens, is what Vivo utilises on the periscope telephoto side, according to Tipster Digital Chat Station. This periscope design features a light-folding prism structure and even permits telephoto macro photography, unlike some competitors’ ship-style designs.
A 50-megapixel ultra-wide camera completes the setup. It may have the Samsung JN1 or JN5 camera sensor, according to rumours.
According to reports, the Vivo X300 Pro will sport a 200-megapixel periscope telephoto camera, a 50-megapixel ultra-wide lens, and a Sony LYT-828 50-megapixel primary camera.