Google Pixel 10 Pro Review: TheSmartest Camera You Can CarrySMARTPHONES

Google’s Pixel line has always been a software showcase wearing decent hardware, and the Pixel 10 Pro is the first time the hardware side stops apologizing. The reason is the Tensor G5 — Google’s first chip manufactured by TSMC on a 3-nanometer process after four generations of Samsung-made silicon that ran warm and benchmarked behind the curve.

Tensor G5: finally credible silicon

Google quotes a CPU around 34% faster and a TPU up to 60% more powerful than the G4, and it’s the first chip that runs the newest Gemini Nano model entirely on-device. Translation: the AI features Pixels are famous for — call screening, live translate, photo editing — respond faster and work offline more often. It still isn’t a Snapdragon 8 Elite Gen 5 in raw gaming throughput, and sustained 3D gaming can trigger thermal throttling, but for everything else the gap has closed to the point of irrelevance.

Display and build

The 10 Pro uses a 6.3-inch Super Actua OLED under Gorilla Glass Victus 2 — bright, sharp, and sensibly sized. After years of giant flagships, a genuinely premium phone you can use one-handed is its own feature. Build quality matches anything from Samsung or Apple at this point.

The cameras are the argument

The 50MP main camera, backed by Google’s computational photography stack and the G5’s all-new image signal processor, produces the most consistently excellent photos of any phone. Point, shoot, done — exposure, skin tones, and dynamic range come out right without thinking. The telephoto reaches an advertised 100x Pro Res Zoom; beyond the lens’s true optical reach Google uses generative processing to reconstruct detail. The results are impressive and occasionally a little uncanny — worth knowing if you care about photographic authenticity. At normal zoom ranges (up to 5x optical on the 48MP telephoto), it’s simply superb and arguably the best point-and-shoot camera ever put in a phone.

Software

Clean Android with seven years of OS and security updates, plus first-in-line access to Google’s features. Pixel software remains the best reason to own a Pixel: the spam call handling alone has saved owners countless hours, and the photo tools (Best Take, Magic Editor, Audio Magic Eraser) are things you’ll actually use rather than demo once.

Weak spots

Charging is stuck at 30W, which is slow for a phone with a $999 list price — rivals at this price charge twice as fast. Heavy gamers will notice throttling. And Google’s hardware discounting is aggressive: the 10 Pro has already been spotted at $749, which is fantastic if you buy on sale and mildly insulting if you paid launch price.

Verdict

The Pixel 10 Pro is the phone to buy if photos, clean software, and long support matter more to you than gaming frame rates and charging speed. At $999 it’s competitive; at the $749 sale price it has appeared at, it embarrasses everything near it. Reviewers across the board have landed in the same place — this is the most recommendable Pixel yet.

Verdict: 4.5/5 — Class-leading camera and software; just buy it on sale and keep a charger handy.

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