Pixel 7 camera system vs. iPhone 14 camera system

Before we get into the comparison photos, here’s a rundown of the respective camera loadouts inside the iPhone 14 (left) and Pixel 7 (right):
iPhone 14: The iPhone 14 camera system differs from the iPhone 14 Pro. The primary camera is a 12-MP sensor with an f/1.5 aperture, while the ultrawide camera is also 12-MP and boasts a 120-degree front-facing field of view. There is no telephoto lens. Apple went triple-threat on the 12-MP sensor by adding it to the front, with an f/1.9 aperture. The iPhone 14 also runs on the last-gen A15 Bionic chip, though it’s been upgraded for the iPhone 14 since it was used in last year’s iPhone 13 Pro. Apple boasts tuned camera algorithms.
Pixel 7: The Pixel 7 has a similar dual-camera system as the Pixel 7 Pro but without the third telephoto lens. On the back, there’s a 50-MP primary camera with an f/1.85 aperture and a 12-MP wide-angle lens with a 114-degree field of view. Google’s leg up is its AI-infused Tensor Chip, specially tuned for processing camera images. The Tensor G2 chip is the same inside the Pixel 7 and Pixel 7 Pro.