
The upcoming OPPO Find X9 Ultra will replace all seven lenses – the main camera, wide-angle lens, two telephoto lenses, a Danxia color lens, the front camera, and a teleconverter…
None of them were heirlooms.

In its more than 20 years of operation, OPPO has very rarely completely overhauled its imaging hardware for a single product generation. Luo Jun said:
This kind of revolutionary upgrade seems to have never been done before.
Luo Jun is the director of OPPO's imaging algorithm, who has led the imaging algorithm direction of four generations of products from Find X6 Pro to Find X9 Ultra, as well as the "Master Mode" that has become a hallmark of OPPO's imaging.
On the eve of the Find X9 Ultra launch, iFanr interviewed Luo Jun. We talked about the newly designed "Master Mode," the unreleased phone, and the past, present, and future of OPPO's imaging technology.
We are trying to find an answer: What is the "realism" of computational photography?

Master Mode: Using Algorithms to Fight Algorithms
What is "Master Mode"?
Simply put, it's an image pipeline in OPPO cameras that's independent of the regular shooting mode.

Normal mode aims for brightness, pleasing colors, and instant good looks—the system automatically increases brightness, enhances color saturation, and performs strong sharpening and noise reduction. These operations make the photos eye-catching at first glance, but at the cost of making them look somewhat artificially "refined."
This is the most common controversy in the mobile imaging industry today: "algorithm-driven".
The "algorithmic flavor" is not a problem of any one company, but rather a structural byproduct of the development of computational photography to its current state.
As mobile phones use increasingly sophisticated algorithms to compensate for the physical limitations of their small bodies—multi-frame synthesis, AI noise reduction, HDR stacking, super-resolution reconstruction—each processing step adds computational traces to the photo: shadows are brightened, highlights are suppressed, noise is smoothed out to create an oil painting-like texture, and sharpening creates more "details."
The result is that everything looks good, but nothing seems to have any purity.

"Master Mode" takes a different approach.
It processes images with more restrained tone mapping, a more natural sharpening strategy, and a tonal logic closer to that of an optical camera. It preserves shadows where they should be dark and retains grain where there is noise, not pursuing "bright white beauty" in every picture, but instead pursuing the realistic texture of the photo.
There's an unwritten rule in the mobile phone industry: if a feature is controversial for two consecutive generations, it will most likely be scrapped in the third generation.
"Master Mode" perfectly embodied this image.
During the Find X7 Ultra era, user opinions on it were polarized. Those who liked it said it had a "camera-like" feel and a "high-end" look; those who disliked it said the image was "dark" and "not sharp." I even encountered a situation where, after sending a photo taken in Master Mode to a friend, their first reaction was: "Did you take this picture blurry?"
But Master Mode survived.
It has transformed from a niche tool for professional users into a photo mode that even college students actively choose.

What's even more intriguing is that users prefer the Master Mode for almost the same reason— it lacks an algorithmic feel.
In fact, the Master Mode runs the most advanced and computationally intensive algorithm pipeline in the entire imaging system.
This sense of contrast is a microcosm of OPPO's current imaging capabilities, and also reflects Luo Jun's complete understanding of computational photography over the past decade.
The masters of traditional filmmaking created the master mode.
Luo Jun majored in image algorithms and joined Sony through campus recruitment.
In the early 2000s, the Japanese imaging industry was the pinnacle of the global imaging industry. He worked on Handycam video recorders, Alpha SLR cameras, and witnessed the development of the NEX mirrorless series from scratch.
But what truly made him see the turning point in the industry was the Sony RX100.
At the time, it cost over 200,000 yen, while a typical point-and-shoot camera cost 50,000 to 60,000 yen. This one sold for over 10,000 yuan as soon as it was released, but it was indeed quite innovative.
Sony crammed a one-inch sensor and a Zeiss lens into a body the size of a shirt pocket. This marked the beginning of the miniaturization trend in imaging. Looking back today, the RX100 and later mobile phone imaging followed the same path: maximizing image quality within extremely limited physical space.

However, mobile phones have gone much further.
During his more than ten years at Sony, all of Luo Jun's image algorithms ran on dedicated ASIC chips. A single chip was developed every two years, covering multiple product lines, prioritizing stability and reliability.
But he gradually realized a fundamental misalignment:
Algorithms iterate rapidly, but ASICs are released every two years. The overall computing power and architecture are somewhat mismatched with the research approach of computational photography and AI—it's too slow.
Later, he discovered the NPU—a processing unit specifically designed for handling neural network computations. Algorithms could run at the software layer, dramatically increasing iteration speed.
However, the best platform for an NPU is not in a camera, but in a mobile phone.
In early 2017, Luo Jun saw OPPO demonstrate its periscope telephoto technology at MWC—10x hybrid zoom, something no one in the mobile phone industry had done at the time. He immediately recognized the company's potential and decided to join OPPO.

Interestingly, ten years later, the Find X9 Ultra, which he spearheaded, features an even better 10x optical telephoto lens, but that's another story.
This shift from traditional to mobile imaging determined the underlying logic behind his Master Mode. Many people feel that Master Mode "lacks algorithmic feedback, resembling straight-out-of-camera output," a comment that Luo Jun found interesting.
Professional cameras also have algorithms, and their ISP pipelines are quite complex, entirely implemented using chips. However, the effect is very similar to our Master Mode, so the user's frame of reference becomes—"I can achieve a camera-like effect using my phone's algorithms."
In his view, the idea that "cameras don't have algorithms" is a misconception. The camera's algorithms are simply embedded in the chip, invisible to the user.
The design of Master Mode stems from this understanding. The goal has never been to "remove the algorithm," but rather to make the algorithm like the ISP of a professional camera—doing a lot of work without you even realizing it.

OPPO internally calls it "using computation to compute" .
Luo Jun said that if your goal is to "make the algorithm invisible," then you can't pursue improvements in a single parameter. You need a systematic set of standards to define what "good" means.
He summarized this standard in four words: true to life.
Three years to reshape OPPO Imaging
At the end of 2021, Luo Jun was transferred back to China from Japan to take full control of the iteration direction of OPPO's imaging algorithms.
For all mobile phone manufacturers, shifting to self-developed imaging algorithms is a decision that involves high long-term investment but low short-term returns.
However, in order to make imaging—not just beautification—a core competitive advantage of OPPO's flagship phones, Luo Jun reorganized a team of hundreds of people working on imaging algorithms.
"Realistic reproduction" is a relatively abstract concept: what kind of images can be considered realistic, and what methods should be used to reproduce them?
Luo Jun breaks it down into three specific dimensions— light and shadow, detail, and color. He has a three-year plan in mind, hoping to reconstruct OPPO's imaging capabilities with three generations of products.
The Find X6 Pro was a turning point for imaging phones under Luo Jun's philosophy, as it primarily addressed the issue of light and shadow.

In an interview with iFanr, OPPO's Director of Imaging Cognition, Cheng Zhuo, stated that the goal of the Find X6 series is to establish "correct tonal relationships"—correcting distorted light and shadow curves.
This generation of Find features the industry's only large-sensor telephoto lens at the time—a 1/1.56-inch CMOS sensor with an equivalent 70mm lens, and is paired with a brand-new Super Light and Shadow Image Engine.
This system, for the first time, enables mobile phones to calibrate brightness information at the pixel level and calculate the light and shadow relationships between the subject, light, and environment. Luo Jun said:
Bright but not dazzling, dark but not black – these are our basic requirements for light and shadow.
Luo Jun also introduced a mode for professional users that could fully utilize the imaging capabilities of mobile phones into OPPO's imaging system, which they named "Hasselblad Professional Mode"—this was the prototype of "Master Mode".
Next, Luo Jun's team needed to address the details.
The Find X7 Ultra features the industry's first dual periscope quad main camera system, adding a telephoto lens that supports 6x optical zoom.

The increase in focal length is not just about "shooting farther." In Luo Jun's understanding, it has a more fundamental meaning:
With more focal lengths, there are more frames of reference. You can record the world from different perspectives, and the system can reconstruct more complete information.
Frame of reference—this is the core concept that Luo Jun uses to understand "realistic reproduction".
Reality is not an absolute objective standard; it depends on what you use as a reference. The viewfinder is one frame of reference, what the human eye sees is another, and the "good photo" imagined by the user is yet another.
The more focal lengths and details a system captures, the more complete the reference information it obtains, and the closer it gets to the "truth" in the user's mind.
The Find X7 Ultra further enhances the quality of light and shadow, especially in the mid-tones.

In everyday photos, the most significant amount of light and shadow information is concentrated in the midtone area—the transition zone between the brightest and darkest parts. If the midtones are coarse, the photo lacks realism.
It was also in this generation of imaging systems that OPPO officially launched "Master Mode". In Luo Jun's view, Master Mode is not exclusive to photographers, but rather returns the power to adjust the camera to the user – just like the levers and knobs on a camera.
However, the first-generation Master Mode had limited generalization capabilities and insufficient scenario compatibility, resulting in mixed user reviews. Some people loved it, while many others couldn't figure it out.
For Luo Jun, technical problems can always be solved, but how to uphold and communicate his ideas is a huge challenge.
The reason why Master Mode has been able to persist is perhaps because we have not compromised.
The lighting and details are there, but color is the last shortcoming.
Computational photography relies heavily on statistics. In complex lighting conditions, inaccurate white balance, skin tone shifts, and environmental color distortion are inherent limitations of statistical methods.

The Find X8 Ultra features a new lens—the Danxia Original Color Lens—dedicated to local color temperature sensing. It can identify the color temperature distribution in different areas of the image, distinguish between natural and artificial light sources, and independently reproduce skin tones and ambient colors.
Color mapping essentially involves two things: white balance and color mapping. White balance is a statistical method, and it's inherently inaccurate in some scenarios. With Danxia landforms, because they contain absolute information, there's a chance to correct deviations in scenes with interfering colors.
The role of Danxia is not to make colors look better, but to provide a physical anchor point for the color calculation pipeline—an objective reference benchmark that does not rely on statistical guessing.
See, it's another frame of reference.
With the Find X8 Ultra, another easily overlooked technological integration was completed: the processing algorithms for Master Mode and Photo Mode in the RAW domain were unified.
The RAW images produced by both modes are the same; the difference lies only in the backend—Photo mode uses a brighter and more pleasing tone mapping, while Master mode uses a more restrained approach to lighting and sharpening.

This means that "Master Mode" is no longer an independent functional branch; its underlying capabilities have become the core of the entire imaging system.
In Luo Jun's view, with the Find X8 Ultra generation, his original vision has finally been realized – light, shadow, detail and color, the three dimensions are combined into a complete form for the first time.
Thus, the new OPPO imaging brand "LUMO" was born.

Luo Jun's team's criteria for judging good images have gradually taken shape after three generations of product iterations— one of the benchmarks being the "continuity" of the photographs .
Photos taken with professional cameras also have noise, but the noise and graininess are continuous and look pleasing. I'd rather have some continuous noise than have patches of sharpness and blurriness in the image.
These standards didn't suddenly emerge during the development of a particular product generation; they originated from the traditional imaging genes ingrained in Luo Jun's bones—signal-to-noise ratio, continuity, and color mapping—only in a different medium, from cameras to mobile phones, from traditional optics to computational photography.

As new image processing algorithms gradually take shape, Luo Jun faces a new situation: the software side has done almost everything it can. The marginal benefits of algorithm iteration are diminishing.
What's next?
Find X9 Ultra: Echoes of a Decade
The answer is to do it again.
Luo Jun divides the development of mobile phone imaging into three stages:
The first phase began around 2015, with the core being device miniaturization—packing large sensors into mobile phones, stacking them from 1/3 inch all the way up to one inch;
The second phase began around 2021, when the algorithmic capabilities of AI and computational photography improved, allowing for the creation of decent-quality photos even without a large 1-inch sensor through algorithmic enhancement.

The third stage is now:
You can't rely on components or algorithms alone. It requires a combination of hardware and software, end-to-end innovation, to have any chance of pushing the effects forward.
The Find X9 Ultra is the product of this third stage—for which OPPO's imaging team went so far as to replace all seven lenses.
The main camera has been upgraded from a 50-megapixel 1-inch sensor to a 200-megapixel 1/1.2-inch sensor, the wide-angle lens has been upgraded from a 1/2.5-inch sensor to a 1/1.95-inch sensor, the first telephoto lens has been replaced with a larger sensor, and the second telephoto lens has been expanded from 6x optical zoom to 10x optical zoom. The color reproduction lens has been upgraded, the front camera has been upgraded from 32 megapixels to 50 megapixels, and even the teleconverter has been upgraded from 200 to 300.

The most challenging part to design was undoubtedly the 10x optical zoom telephoto lens.
Luo Jun showed iFanr the Find X9 Ultra's 10x telephoto lens—a 1/2.8-inch sensor paired with a 230mm lens group, but the entire module is only 29mm long, with the length of the prism being about half a little finger.

What's even more ingenious is that this prism isn't a single piece; it's made of three prisms joined together, with an air layer sealed in the middle to eliminate stray light. This process is unprecedented in the industry chain—no one has ever cut a prism into three pieces and glued them together, no one has ever sealed an air layer in the middle of a prism, and of course, no one has ever built such a production line.
Therefore, everything had to be started from scratch.
Luo Jun positioned this 10x telephoto lens as a "pocket teleconverter"—the teleconverter on the OPPO Find X9 Pro is more than ten centimeters long, while the "built-in teleconverter" on the X9 Ultra is only 29 millimeters long, but the image quality is the same.
That's why you can find all the mainstream focal lengths from 14mm to 230mm in the OPPO Find X9 Ultra, which is the classic "holy trinity" configuration of cameras.
In 2016, Luo Jun was impressed by OPPO's 10x periscope telephoto technology demonstration at MWC and decided to join the company. Ten years later, he and his team have embedded the best 10x optical telephoto lens to date into a mobile phone—for Luo Jun, this is an echo spanning a decade.

With the addition of 10x telephoto, the creative possibilities in Master Mode have expanded dramatically: videos can be shot at 10x or 20x zoom, and portrait mode has also added a 10x zoom range—something Luo Jun hadn't anticipated three years ago.
I probably never considered shooting these things with 10x zoom before, but suddenly I found that the material space has become much larger, which is quite interesting.
The new generation of Master Mode is also easier to use and share.
Luo Jun said that his favorite feature is the "recipe sharing" function. Users can adjust the shooting parameters and take photos in master mode, and the recipe will be embedded in the photo watermark.
When others see this photo, they can quickly import the same recipe and create a new one using ColorOS's one-click note function—it's so convenient for Xiaohongshu users who love to share their photos.
The premise for this feature to work is precisely that the previous three generations made the underlying pipeline of Master Mode sufficiently stable. If the pipeline is not mature, the recipe will fail in a different scenario after being shared.

Good computational photography is when you forget about computational photography.
Towards the end of the interview, we touched on a slightly abstract question: What is the "reality" of computational photography?
Luo Jun's answer consisted of only two sentences:
One is called "what you see is what you get," and the other is called "what you get is what you think."
What you see is what you get—that's what you get in the frame. But he believes the real key is the second half: users have expectations of what constitutes a good photo, and the job of the imaging system is to get as close to those expectations as possible.
When you take a photo, you're visualizing the effect of that photo. Whether it's what you see or what you imagine, that's the brain working on the post-processing.
Before you press the shutter, you already have an image in your mind. That image is your frame of reference.

This reminds me of my experience when I traveled to Sydney. I went there specifically to a famous photo spot, but it was a rainy day and there were a lot of people. After taking the photos, I wasn't very satisfied with them.
So, I thought of using Doubao to edit the photo—I added a sunset, removed the shadows, and after editing, I felt that this was what I wanted, but is this still considered photography?

Luo Jun told me:
It's definitely photography. But what percentage of what you envision in your mind is actually recorded, and what percentage is generated? This percentage varies depending on the tools and the context. The value of our imaging systems lies in maximizing the portion that is truly recorded. Otherwise, we could just rely on simple cameras.
From Master Mode to the reconstruction of OPPO Imaging, and then to the Find X9 Ultra—in Luo Jun's view, all of this has always pointed to the same goal:
Minimize the distance between the photo in your mind and the photo taken by your phone.
A true recreation is not only a recreation of reality itself, but also a recreation of the frame of reference in our minds.

Luo Jun said that in the future, image interaction must be simple for users—users can just pick it up and shoot without having to think about it, because the system already understands what you want.
I think that by then, the concept of realistic reproduction had already permeated the entire OPPO Crystal Imaging System.
Good computational photography is about making you forget about computational photography.
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