Doubts raised over 'iPhone 13' quad-camera rumor
Prominent leaker Jon Prosser has cast doubt on a leak claiming to detail the camera layout of the "iPhone 13," saying that there's a "0% chance" of that layout in the 2021 flagship.

iPhone 11, iPhone 11 Pro cameras.
On May 28, an image was shared on Twitter by a leaker known as "Fudge" showing what they described was the planned camera bump design of the "iPhone 13." Rather than a triple-camera setup, as used in the iPhone 11 Pro and iPhone 11 Pro Max, Fudge claimed Apple would instead switch to a four-lens arrangement, with an added LiDAR module below the bump itself.
In response to the image, Jon Prosser posted to Twitter declaring the illustration was "not real," and that the layout for the "iPhone 13" or "12S" would be the same as for the "iPhone 12."

The image of the supposed 'iPhone 13' camera bump and LiDAR sensor.
In response to a query from a follower about how the original posting of the rumor hedged bets by suggesting it may not be true this early in the product's development, Prosser added "we're talking 0% chance of this being it." Prosser also added there "was no reason to post this image."
Fudge claimed the "iPhone 13" will have a 64-megapixel wide lens camera with 1x optical and 6x digital zooms, a 40-megapixel telephoto camera with 3x to 5x optical and 15 to 20x digital zoom, a 40-megapixel ultra-wide with 0.25x "optical reverse zoom," and a 40-megapixel anamorphic lens sporting a 2.1:1 ratio.
If true, this would represent a considerable increase in camera resolution for Apple, as the iPhone 11 Pro's cameras all use 12-megapixel sensors.
Current rumors for the "iPhone 12" suggest it could inherit the LiDAR sensor from the fourth-generation iPad Pro, providing it with rear-mounted depth sensing. There has also been the suggestion of an improved camera module with bigger sensors and changes to the camera elements.

iPhone 11, iPhone 11 Pro cameras.
On May 28, an image was shared on Twitter by a leaker known as "Fudge" showing what they described was the planned camera bump design of the "iPhone 13." Rather than a triple-camera setup, as used in the iPhone 11 Pro and iPhone 11 Pro Max, Fudge claimed Apple would instead switch to a four-lens arrangement, with an added LiDAR module below the bump itself.
In response to the image, Jon Prosser posted to Twitter declaring the illustration was "not real," and that the layout for the "iPhone 13" or "12S" would be the same as for the "iPhone 12."

The image of the supposed 'iPhone 13' camera bump and LiDAR sensor.
In response to a query from a follower about how the original posting of the rumor hedged bets by suggesting it may not be true this early in the product's development, Prosser added "we're talking 0% chance of this being it." Prosser also added there "was no reason to post this image."
Fudge claimed the "iPhone 13" will have a 64-megapixel wide lens camera with 1x optical and 6x digital zooms, a 40-megapixel telephoto camera with 3x to 5x optical and 15 to 20x digital zoom, a 40-megapixel ultra-wide with 0.25x "optical reverse zoom," and a 40-megapixel anamorphic lens sporting a 2.1:1 ratio.
If true, this would represent a considerable increase in camera resolution for Apple, as the iPhone 11 Pro's cameras all use 12-megapixel sensors.
Current rumors for the "iPhone 12" suggest it could inherit the LiDAR sensor from the fourth-generation iPad Pro, providing it with rear-mounted depth sensing. There has also been the suggestion of an improved camera module with bigger sensors and changes to the camera elements.
Comments
Oh wait...
Just greedy, selfish people taking advantage of civil unrest to fill their pockets. Not a lot different from greedy, selfish 1%'rs taking advantage of political unrest to fill their pockets by looting the country's treasury and its future.
Most of the top phones pixel bin to output at a far lower resolution.
Pair that with better, larger sensors (some custom designed), good ISPs and good software etc and you largely have a more capable camera setup.
I wouldn't read much into this particular rumour but I can see how Apple might jump into the high (or very high) megapixel count at some point.
Recent phones have offered more versatility via their different cameras/software options and the high pixel count is part of that even though it isn't the only aspect involved.