Both cameras share a solid common foundation: a 50 MP primary sensor with OIS, phase-detection autofocus, 4K/30fps video recording, and an identical feature set covering HDR mode, slow-motion, timelapse, panorama, and a full suite of manual controls including ISO, focus, exposure, and white balance. For everyday shooting, these similarities mean the core camera experience will feel closely aligned on both devices.
The differences, while few, are meaningful. On the secondary rear lens, the Edge 60 Fusion pairs its main sensor with a 13 MP secondary camera, compared to just 8 MP on the Redmi Note 15 Pro 5G. A higher-resolution secondary lens retains more detail when shooting ultra-wide or macro scenes, giving the Edge 60 Fusion more flexibility in that role. The selfie camera gap is equally notable — the Edge 60 Fusion offers a 32 MP front camera versus the Redmi's 20 MP, a significant difference for users who prioritize portrait selfies or video calls. More megapixels on a front sensor allows for greater cropping and detail retention, especially in good lighting.
Perhaps the most telling differentiator for photography enthusiasts is RAW shooting support: the Edge 60 Fusion can capture RAW image files, while the Redmi Note 15 Pro 5G cannot. RAW output gives users full post-processing control in editing software, preserving far more image data than a compressed JPEG. Combined with its stronger secondary and front cameras, the Motorola Edge 60 Fusion holds a clear camera advantage in this group — particularly for users who care about selfie quality or hands-on photo editing.