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Sony LYT-901 200MP Sensor Launched — OPPO Find X9 Ultra and Vivo X300 Ultra Likely First to Adopt

Sony just introduced its first 200MP smartphone camera sensor, and yes, it’s called the LYT-901. If you’ve been following camera tech leaks over the past few weeks, this name might feel familiar. It was earlier floating around as IMX09E, but Sony has now folded it into its LYTIA lineup with a cleaner, more consumer-facing name.

Sony Launches LYT-901, Its Debut 200MP Camera Sensor for Flagships

So what’s the big deal here? This isn’t just Sony jumping into the megapixel race for the sake of it. The company is clearly trying to reshape how high-resolution sensors behave in real-world phone photography.

A closer look at what Sony built

The LYT-901 uses a large 1/1.12-inch sensor paired with 0.7μm pixels, delivering a full 200MP output. That size alone puts it firmly in flagship territory. But the more interesting part is how Sony handles all that data.

Instead of sticking to a traditional Bayer layout, the sensor uses a Quad-Quad Bayer mosaic along with a dedicated hardware Remosaic path. There’s also AI-driven processing built directly into the rebayer circuit. In simple terms, this setup is designed to reduce the strain on the phone’s main processor while keeping image quality stable and noise levels lower.

Sony is also pushing dynamic range here. The sensor combines Dual Conversion Gain HDR with Hybrid Frame HDR, which briefly captures a very short exposure frame to protect highlight details. The company claims a dynamic range of over 100dB, or roughly 17 stops. That should help balance harsh highlights and deep shadows, especially in tricky lighting.

Zoom and video try to steal the spotlight

Zoom is where this sensor starts to feel genuinely practical. The LYT-901 supports 2x hardware zoom for photos and 4x sensor-in-zoom for both photos and video. At 4x, it aims to mimic a near-telephoto look without needing a separate optical zoom lens.

Sony also highlights its video capabilities. The sensor supports 4K video at 30fps while maintaining 4x hardware zoom, a combination that’s still rare. There’s also support for 4K recording at 120fps when using 4x pixel binning. Add to that pixel-binned modes like 50MP and 12.5MP, and it’s clear Sony is targeting cleaner low-light results and more flexible framing.

This sensor even seems tailored for concert and stage photography, where distance and uneven lighting usually ruin shots on regular phones.

Which phones could bring it first

Early reports suggest that the OPPO Find X9 Ultra and Vivo X300 Ultra could be the first phones to feature the LYT-901. These are expected to sit at the very top of their respective lineups and focus heavily on camera performance.

Expect these top-tier flagships to arrive next year, but don’t keep your hopes up for a global launch, as these Ultra flagships tend to be restricted to China.

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