The rear camera systems are largely matched in capability, but the iQOO Neo 10R reveals a structural advantage: its dual rear setup is explicitly specified as 50 MP + 8 MP, indicating a dedicated secondary lens — most likely an ultrawide — that extends compositional flexibility. The Realme P3 Ultra is listed as a dual-lens system too, but its secondary sensor resolution is not disclosed in the provided data, making a direct comparison on that lens impossible. Both phones share the same 50 MP primary sensor, OIS, phase-detection autofocus, 4K at 60fps video, and an identical manual controls suite, so for the main shooter, parity is the operative word.
The front camera is where the gap becomes unambiguous. The iQOO Neo 10R sports a 32 MP selfie camera versus the Realme's 16 MP — double the resolution, which directly translates to sharper selfies and more detail retention when cropping. The Realme partially compensates with a marginally wider front aperture of f/2.4 compared to the iQOO's f/2.5, which can capture very slightly more light in low-light selfie scenarios, but the resolution disadvantage is the larger factor for most users.
Across video features, HDR recording modes, and shooting utilities, the two phones are effectively identical — neither supports HDR10 or Dolby Vision recording, and both offer the same range of shooting modes. The iQOO Neo 10R takes this category, primarily on the strength of its higher-resolution front camera and the explicitly documented secondary rear lens, giving it an edge for users who prioritize selfie quality and rear camera versatility.