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Xiaomi MIUI camera app teardown reveals ultra wide angle support, beauty mode for body

August 07, 2025

Xiaomismartphones have made major strides in terms of camera capabilities, slowly closing the gap to top-flight competition. Now, a teardown of the Xiaomi MIUI camera app has potentially revealed a few details about future photography features.

The teardown, conducted byXDA-Developers, reveals that the company is working on anultra wide anglemode. This is particularly noteworthy because the Chinese brand doesn’t have a phone with an ultra wide angle rear camera. If confirmed, this means Xiaomi joinsLG,Huawei, andSamsungas four of the most prominent brands with the feature.

Xiaomi Mi Mix 3 - camera and fingerprint sensor closeup

The outlet also found a few more ultra wide angle references, such as picture distortion correction and ultra wide bokeh shots. Speaking of bokeh, it seems like Xiaomi is finally implementing simulated aperture adjustments to tweak bokeh effects. This has long been a fixture on dual-camera phones from the likes of HUAWEI,Nokiaand Samsung, so we’re glad to see the company seemingly catching up here.

What else is Xiaomi doing?

The manufacturer is also working on a feature dubbed Live Shot or Dynamic Photos, according toXDA. It sounds like a take on Google’s Motion Photos, but the strange thing is that the app has separate references to Motion Photos as well. So we’ll probably need to wait a while to see what Xiaomi is actually doing with these features.

Another intriguing feature uncovered by the outlet is an expanded beauty mode, targeting more than just your face. In fact, this beauty mode contains references to shoulders, legs, and body. Beauty modes have become one of the most popular camera features today, but could an expanded mode deliver more than just ridiculously smooth skin? Well, I’m betting it’ll trim a few pounds off your frame.

Smartphone photography tips.

Finally, the Xiaomi MIUI camera app teardown also reveals new effects for portrait mode and videos, a Live Music mode (presumably letting you record a short video and add a track to it), and the existence of a Xiaomi phone with a48MP primary cameraand an unspecified secondary camera.

The latter is seemingly obvious, owing to the trend of dual and triple camera smartphones in the first place. But quite a few chipsets lack explicit support for 48MP single camera setups, let alone a 48MP camera alongside a secondary shooter. In any event, Xiaomi is apparently dubbing its solution “ultra pixel photography,” which is presumably a reference to the 48MP camera’spixel-binned approach.

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