Camera systems on tablets are rarely a primary purchase driver, but the differences here are still worth unpacking. The Huawei MatePad Pro 12.2 leads on the rear with a 50 MP main sensor paired with an 8 MP secondary, giving it a significant resolution advantage over the Lenovo Yoga Tab Plus's 13 MP + 2 MP rear setup. Higher megapixel counts allow for more detail retention when cropping shots or capturing fine text and documents — a genuinely practical use case for a productivity-oriented tablet. The Yoga Tab Plus, however, counters at the front: its 13 MP selfie camera comfortably outresolves the MatePad Pro's 8 MP front shooter, which matters most for video calls, where front camera quality is far more frequently used than the rear.
Beyond resolution, the two tablets are remarkably evenly matched. Both offer the same manual controls — ISO, white balance, focus, and exposure — identical flash configurations, continuous autofocus during video, and a shared absence of optical image stabilization or optical zoom. Neither supports HDR10 or Dolby Vision recording, and both lack a front-facing flash. In short, the feature parity is near-total; resolution is essentially the only meaningful variable separating them.
This category comes down to how you use your tablet's camera. For document scanning, rear photography, or capturing physical content, the MatePad Pro's 50 MP main sensor gives it a tangible edge. For video conferencing — arguably the more common tablet camera use case — the Yoga Tab Plus's sharper 13 MP front camera is the practical winner. Overall, the two products split this category, with each holding an advantage in a different but legitimate real-world scenario.