Back when I wrote my Google Pixel 10 Pro review, I said that, as good as the phone is, it doesn’t actually feel like much of an upgrade over the Pixel 9 Pro. I’ve now been using the phone almost every day for the past two months, and now I can safely say that my assessment hit the nail on the head.

There’s nothing particularly wrong with the Pixel 10 Pro. It’s a fantastic phone with a lot of great features and software touches — but it is a textbook example of an iterative upgrade. No matter how good or impressive this phone seems to be, I can’t help but think that there was nothing on offer that I couldn’t do with the Pixel 9 Pro.

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Qi2 wireless charging this year, and not in the half-hearted way Samsung added it to the Galaxy S25 series. This has the new charging protocol and the magnetic ring, with no need for any kind of special case. Which I had done with Pixel 9 Pro, with mixed results.

While the wireless charging speed has been reduced on the 10 Pro (the 10 Pro XL is a different story), having Qi2 comes with extra benefits. The magnets, of course, offer improved alignment for magnetic chargers and the ability to snap on various accessories.

Not to mention the fact that the Qi2 standard is faster than Qi1 (15W vs 7.5W) and has adaptive charging, which ensures your phone is only taking as much power as it needs. All of which works together for a better and more efficient wireless charging experience.

100x magnification offered on the Pixel 10 Pro. While the in-camera preview isn’t anything to celebrate, once the generative AI processing gets involved, you end up with some extremely impressive photos of stuff your camera normally wouldn’t be able to capture.

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Is using generative AI cheating? Maybe. But as long as it’s not hallucinating stuff that isn’t there, it’s one of my favorite new additions to the Pixel 10 Pro.