And there's the problem, right there.
One guy taking it with a grain of salt because it's prerelease and another deciding it's a problem based on the publications.
Everyone asked for megapixels and that's what they delivered.
I honestly am not impressed by any of the high MP phone cameras because they exacerbate the biggest problem going - insane levels of jpeg compression, and that's what HTC has been among the worst at.
I agree that OIS would have been a welcome improvement, however, as a point of reference, the OIS in the M7 and LG G2 (same generation) is far better than in last year's LG G3. So there's OIS and there's OIS.
With this processor, it could be added in software later (quite easily) using the gyroscope that's already there and you wouldn't notice a speed difference at all.
So thanks, I'm not going to waste time looking at any prerelease snaps.
I seem to recall that HTC almost always has a system update within the first month after release - and also as I recall, that's going to include a camera update.
But by then, the clickbait articles will have already updated with the new "truth" because it's final (not first month fixes that they *all* do), shot mostly by editors that can't take pictures anyway and that's going to be the Internet Reality of the camera for the life of the phone, no matter what.
I'll wait patiently and enjoy what the early adopters post here, both as snapshots and as more serious photo efforts before deciding anything.
The annual HTC, LG, and Samsung picture threads here very often show some really great photos, especially for a cell phone.
Mostly because they're taken by people with real software, after they've learned their cameras, and who care about the subjects they're shooting.
Give me that over the silly e-rag announcement and release horse-race, click-bait "shoot outs" any day of the week and twice on Sunday!
PS - HTC was still taking user feedback until quite recently on the camera. No way that feedback was incorporated as improvements by MWC.