Xiaomi 13 review: caught in the middle
XIAOMI 13 REVIEW: KEY SPECS
Chipset: | Qualcomm SM8550-AB Snapdragon 8 Gen 2 |
RAM: | 8-12GB |
Storage: | 128-512GB |
OS | MIUI 14 (Android 13-based) |
Screen: | 6.36in AMOLED, 1080 x 2400px, 414ppi |
Cameras: | 50MP f/1.8 main, 10MP telephoto, 12MP ultrawide, 32MP front |
Connectivity: | 5G, Wi-Fi 6, Bluetooth 5.3, NFC, USB 2.0 Type-C, Infrared port |
Dimensions: | 152.8 x 71.5 x 8.0mm |
Weight: | 189g |
Battery: | Li-Po 4500 mAh, non-removable |
DESIGN & BUILD
The Xiaomi 13, despite being nominally the 'main' version of the 13 Pro and Lite variants, looks completely different to its siblings. Instead of the borderless curved screen on the Pro and Lite, the casing here is a traditional iPhone-like construction, with a thin-bezelled 6.36-inch screen at the front, a shiny aluminium frame and a glass or silicone-polymer back. The rounded corner only enhance the iPhone feel of the thing.
It weighs about 189 grams, slightly more than the iPhone 14, mostly I think due to the Leica-engineered lens poking out from the top-left of the backside being a bit bulkier than Apple's native camera. We reported on the sheer brilliance of this camera in our Xiaomi 13 Pro review, so hopes are high here...
The screen is Gorilla glass and the back is very shiny too, making for a strong first impression (and smudges galore on every finger impression afterwards), especially as there is a host of colour options available, which at last count included [deep breath]: White, Black, Flora Green, Mountain Blue, Red, Blue, Yellow, Green, and Gray. Our sample is a Flora Green, which is essentially a very faded and understated shade of green, which I really like myself, but bolder options are certainly available (the Red looks especially striking).
FEATURES & SCREEN
On the inside, the Xiaomi 13 welcomes you with an Android 13-based OS developed in-house, called MIUI 14. It's essentially an Android ecosystem, but with a few interface options borrowed from iOS and your customary agglomeration of bloatware (including two messaging apps and not one, not two, but three different web browsers? Why? Why, Mi?). Dig your way through that, though, and happier times prevail.
There's a fingerprint sensor on-screen and facial-recognition unlock tech on board here, with fast charging available via the included 67W charger (I also hooked it up to a 120W charger I had, which charged it up even faster than the 38 minutes stated in the specs, so there's capacity in reserve there). Your regular convenience features are here, including NFC, wireless Qi charging and a 120Hz, 1900-nit, 414ppi screen.
While it's smaller than the curved proposition on the Xiaomi 13 Pro, the 6.36 inches are put to good use here, with a watch-it-outside-in-bright-sunlight-quality screen that plays movies, trailers and your mother-in-law's incomprehensible stream of cat-related TikToks in sharp detail. The speaker isn't quite as impressive as the Pro, though, but it's still more than serviceable for some portable house-cleaning music motivation. Or audio-editing a video. That too.
There's a photo and video-editing facility included with the phone, as expected, and when combined with the camera (covered below), it makes for a very pleasing user experience indeed. The options aren't quite as expansive as on the Pro, but they included everything I needed for editing videos for social media and review photos for this website, to name but two examples.
The model I tested had 12GB of RAM and a 256GB storage. There's no SD slot, so unfortunately adding to it is not an option. You can choose from a 128, 256 or 512GB options at the point of purchase though.
CAMERA
With that Leica tag on the lens, Xiaomi wants to make it clear that this is not your regular phone camera. Co-engineered with iconic photography brand Leica, the camera on the 13 Pro blew my mind, so I had high hopes here, despite the slightly lower specs on this model. There's a 50MP, 23mm wide lens on the back, along with a 10MP, 75mm telephoto and a 12MP, 15mm ultrawide lens (120 degrees here), while the selfie camera is a 32MP, 22mm one like on the Pro.
Disappointingly, there's no macro option here for one of my favourite pastimes, which is variably artful close-ups of bees, toys and insects, but after playing around with the Portrait mode and different optical zooms, I managed to find a mode that I enjoyed, but it still felt like a strange omission (unless I'm the stupid one here and simply didn't find the option for it). There's a fully manual 'pro' setting here as well, where you can customise nearly every aspect of your photography like on a DSLR, but the variety of presets for hobbyists and amateurs is impressive enough to make for a very successful camera proposition.
Like on the Pro, you can shoot 8K video in HDR, as well as snap HDR photos, and choose between two main Leica lens modes, 'Vibrant' and 'Authentic'. Due to the sensor being ever-so-slightly smaller here than on the Pro, nighttime photography doesn't pop quite as impressively, but it still rivals many of the best on the market right now.