The headline megapixel count favors the Legion Y700 (Gen 4) at 50 MP on the rear camera versus the iPad Pro 11 (2025)'s 12 MP, but raw resolution is only part of the story. The iPad Pro 11 pairs its main shooter with a BSI (backside-illuminated) CMOS sensor, a hardware advantage that improves light capture efficiency — particularly in lower-light conditions. The Legion Y700 lists neither a BSI nor a CMOS sensor, which tempers expectations around what its high megapixel count will actually deliver in real-world shots. The iPad Pro 11 also offers 2x optical zoom, while the Legion Y700 has none, meaning any zoom on the Lenovo is purely digital and will degrade image quality.
The iPad Pro 11 pulls further ahead in feature depth: it supports HDR10 video recording, slow-motion, panoramas, timelapse, serial shot mode, and a 4-LED dual-tone flash — a notably richer imaging toolkit. The Legion Y700, by contrast, lacks slow-motion, panorama, timelapse, and HDR10 recording, and uses a single-LED flash. It does include a video light that the iPad Pro 11 omits, which can be useful for close-up video in dark environments, but this is a narrow advantage against the breadth of what it is missing.
For front-facing use, the iPad Pro 11's 12 MP selfie camera holds a significant edge over the Legion Y700's 8 MP unit — relevant for video calls and content creation. Overall, the iPad Pro 11 (2025) is the stronger camera package by a clear margin, offering better sensor technology, optical zoom, HDR video, and a far wider feature set, making it the obvious choice for users who care about imaging capability.