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vivo X300 Ultra Camera Specs Revealed: A Professional-Grade System in Your Pocket?

On March 23, 2026, vivo held its annual X-series Blueprint Imaging Technology event, where it unveiled key specifications and technological breakthroughs for the upcoming vivo X300 Ultra. The company is positioning its new flagship not just as a smartphone, but as a complete professional mobile imaging device designed to excel in both photography and videography—a true pocket camera.


vivo X300 Ultra Camera Specs Revealed: A Professional-Grade System in Your Pocket?

 

Building on the legacy of its predecessors—the X100 Ultra, which introduced the 200MP telephoto era, and the X200 Ultra, which integrated professional camera design philosophies—the vivo X300 Ultra aims to become the ultimate professional creative tool for users. It is designed to be a pocket-sized camera that empowers users to capture their first cinematic story.

 

vivo X300 Ultra Camera Specs Revealed: A Professional-Grade System in Your Pocket?

 

The vivo X300 Ultra features a rear triple-camera setup with classic focal lengths of 14mm, 35mm, and 85mm to cover a vast range of shooting scenarios. The main camera debuts the world's first Blueprint × Sony LYTIA-901 sensor, which boasts a massive 1/1.12-inch sensor size, a 30% increase in single-pixel light-sensitive area, and a 32% improvement in full-well capacity. The 85mm ZEISS gimbal-level telephoto lens, dubbed the 'fifth-generation 200MP Overlord Telephoto,' is powered by the new Blueprint × Samsung HP0 sensor, offering a 10% improvement in SNR10, 10.9% better color reproduction, and a 38% reduction in power consumption.

The telephoto camera's stability is enhanced by 3° 'micro-gimbal' technology and a new proprietary OIS algorithm, resulting in a 300% equivalent increase in light intake and a 24% improvement in telephoto video stability. For the ultra-wide lens, the X300 Ultra uses what is claimed to be the strongest sensor available, with a 1/1.28-inch light-sensitive area and a stabilization upgrade from CIPA 5.0 to CIPA 6.0. To further extend its capabilities, vivo introduced two new teleconverters: a 2.35x (200mm equivalent) G2 and a 4.7x G2 Ultra, both ZEISS APO certified with CIPA 6.5 and CIPA 4.5 stabilization ratings, respectively.

Beyond hardware, the new Blueprint Imaging system introduces vivo Color Science, which focuses on color perception, tonal consistency, and emotional value. This system includes a new 12-spectral channel 5MP camera for capturing precise color information even in complex lighting. The X300 Ultra also offers over ten classic camera styles out-of-the-box and allows users to create and share custom color profiles via the Blueprint Color Palette. In portrait photography, the new Blueprint Native Portrait mode preserves natural skin texture, while all four key focal lengths (35/85/200/400mm) support 200MP output for stunning detail.

Perhaps the biggest surprise is the X300 Ultra's professional video capabilities. It achieves full-focal-length cinematic OIS and supports full-chain, full-focal-length 4K 120fps 10-bit Log recording, along with 10-bit 422 APV professional video encoding for maximum post-production flexibility. Driven by an 'Imaging + AI' dual-core engine built on a 30-billion-parameter algorithm framework, the device offers intelligent features like an AI Creative Camera that ensures portraits are both beautiful and authentic. A new on-device Photography Assistant recognizes over 2000 scenes to provide professional composition advice, while the industry-first 'AskPhoto' function allows for high-precision photo searching and organization.

 

vivo X300 Ultra Camera Specs Revealed: A Professional-Grade System in Your Pocket?

 

As vivo's Senior Product Planning Expert for Imaging, Li Zhuo, stated, the X300 Ultra is more than a product iteration; it's a reimagining of professional creation. By combining a top-tier ZEISS lens system, reconstructed color science, and a powerful pocket camera experience, vivo is simplifying complex photography technology. Faced with a 'new species' so thoroughly armed with professional imaging tools, one has to wonder: will you still feel the need to bring out your dedicated camera?

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