The countdown has officially begun for the CMF Phone 2 Pro, which Nothing is preparing to unveil very soon. The smartphone recently appeared in performance tests, leaving little doubt about the kind of user experience it will offer. The latest developments now reveal the device’s camera capabilities.
CMF Phone 2 Pro Camera Specifications Revealed
Nothing has disclosed the camera features of the CMF Phone 2 Pro, which is expected to be introduced on April 28. According to the information, the smartphone will feature a 50 MP wide-angle camera with a 1/1.57-inch sensor, a 50 MP telephoto lens with 2x optical zoom, and an 8 MP ultra-wide-angle camera with a 119.5° field of view. Details about the selfie camera, however, have not yet been shared.

The CMF Phone 2 Pro was spotted on Geekbench with the model number A001. It achieved a score of 1,012 in single-core tests and 2,939 in multi-core tests, which indirectly revealed some of its key specifications.
According to the Geekbench listing, the device will be powered by the MediaTek Dimensity 7300 chipset. Built on a 4nm architecture, the SoC includes 4x 2.5 GHz ARM Cortex-A78 cores, 4x 2.0 GHz ARM Cortex-A55 cores, and a Mali-G615 MC2 GPU.
The tested prototype featured 8 GB of RAM, although other memory configurations may be introduced at launch. Additionally, the device will run Android 15 right out of the box.
For reference, here are the specifications of last year’s CMF Phone 1:
Feature | CMF Phone 1 |
---|---|
Color Options | Light Red, Green, Blue, Black |
Display | 6.67-inch Super AMOLED, Full HD+, 120Hz refresh rate, 2000 nits peak brightness, 240Hz touch sampling rate |
Front Camera | 16 Megapixels |
Rear Cameras | 50 MP main camera, 2 MP depth sensor |
Processor | MediaTek Dimensity 7300 |
RAM | 6GB / 8GB |
Storage | 128GB / 256GB |
Battery Capacity | 5000 mAh |
Fast Charging | 33W |
Operating System | Android 14-based Nothing OS 2.6 |
Durability | IPX2 |
Other Features | AI wallpaper generator, 5W reverse wired charging, 2 years of major Android updates, 3 years of security updates |