Honor’s 200 Professional is an upper-midranger or possibly a lesser flagship. It has a beautiful display, good battery life, quick charging, a flexible digital camera, and the AI options of Honor’s flagship, Magic 6 Professional. Compromises are minimal. Certain, the processor is a step down from the flagship tier, it’s barely much less water-proof, the digital camera isn’t fairly pretty much as good, and the 200 Professional misses out on safe face unlock, however it affords a fairly related expertise at a way more inexpensive value (£700 within the UK or 800 euros in Europe). It’s not formally offered within the US.
Honor centered on the portrait prowess of the 200 Professional within the unveiling, speaking up its partnership with Paris-based Studio Harcourt (a well-known portrait studio). However, like lots of the 200 Professional’s AI options, these things feels a bit gimmicky. The actual purpose to have a look at the 200 Professional is the {hardware} you get for the worth. Simply bear in mind that Honor’s software program will be jarring, and the design isn’t for everybody.
Basic or Previous
Whereas the Honor 200 Professional looks like a cultured telephone, the design provides me grandmother vibes. I acknowledge this would possibly simply be me, however one thing in regards to the cameo brooch-shaped digital camera module (supposedly impressed by Gaudi’s “Casa Milá”) and the pale inexperienced (Ocean Cyan), swirly, mother-of-pearl end has me picturing Grandma fishing it out of her purse. There’s nothing unsuitable with the design, and I really feel dangerous dunking on an try to do one thing completely different with the digital camera module, however it’s simply not for me.
The 200 Professional is mild, slim, and curves back and front into the aluminum body. It’s totally comfy to carry. However I’ve grown bored with curved screens and the inevitable unintended touches. I’ve no different complaints in regards to the 6.78-inch AMOLED display. The two,700 x 1,224-pixel decision is a lot sharp, the refresh charge goes as much as 120 Hz, and it is shiny sufficient to learn outside (Honor claims 4,000 nits of peak brightness, however that sounds optimistic). The sound high quality of the stereo audio system can also be spectacular.
The fingerprint sensor on the backside of the display proved quick and responsive. I’m not eager on the double cutout for the front-facing digital camera, and there’s no 3D time-of-flight sensor, so the 200 Professional doesn’t boast the safe face unlock of its costlier sibling. The 200 Professional scores an IP65 score, that means rain and spills are most likely high quality, however it’s best to keep away from submersion.
The 200 Professional depends on Qualcomm’s Snapdragon 8s Gen 3 processor, which is meant for the midrange. Considerably confusingly, it’s a step down from the Snapdragon 8 Gen 3, however I doubt many people will really feel an absence of processing energy. The 200 Professional felt snappy, largely protecting its cool whereas operating video games like Asphalt 9: Legends. Honor has generously appointed the 200 Professional with 12 GB of RAM and 512 GB of storage.
Portrait Images
The Honor 200 Professional has a triple-lens major digital camera that mixes a 50-megapixel major shooter with a reasonably large 1/1.3-inch picture sensor, a 50-megapixel telephoto lens with a custom-made Sony IMX 856 sensor able to 2.5X optical zoom, and a 12-megapixel ultrawide that may additionally deal with macro images. Honor made an enormous deal of this telephone’s portrait chops, developed with the assistance of Studio Harcourt. True to that theme, there’s a 50-megapixel front-facing digital camera with a 2-megapixel lens for depth sensing.
Honor has been fast to roll AI options into its telephones, and the 200 Professional has its “AI Portrait Engine” inbuilt, which is meant to benefit from shadow and light-weight that can assist you nail your required creative fashion with portrait photographs. There’s even a Harcourt Portrait mode within the digital camera app that allows you to select between vibrant, shade, or traditional (black-and-white) types, however it solely works with the primary digital camera, not the front-facing selfie digital camera.