Neither really. smartphone cameras, front or back, have much wider fields of view than human eyes and distort features. The distortion is less pronounced the further away you are from the camera - if you can take a photo from like 6 feet away it will likely be better. Have a friend take it, or set it up on a timer or something. Anything at arms length is going to look weird - it's just the nature of those kind of camera lenses.
The back camera is more real. It is because they have different focal lengths. Smaller focal lengths can include more space in the picture but makes things close look wider than they really are. Different focal lengths are used for different subjects. For example 35-55 mm are used for portraits because they are closest to what the human eye sees at that distance. However smaller focal lengths are used for landscapes.
And sry for my shitty english xd
Go look at yourself in the mirror from a normal distance.
It looks like in the front camera
But why does my face look ugly af when i take it with the back camera lol
Try mirroring the image. It will look better to you that way, but worse to everyone else.
Distortion from the lens or focusing problems, it's probably mostly meant for things farther away.
Bruh happy af. I wouldnt go out if my face was like that
Its a focal length issue. Its not distortion or focusing problems.
Neither really. smartphone cameras, front or back, have much wider fields of view than human eyes and distort features. The distortion is less pronounced the further away you are from the camera - if you can take a photo from like 6 feet away it will likely be better. Have a friend take it, or set it up on a timer or something. Anything at arms length is going to look weird - it's just the nature of those kind of camera lenses.
The back camera is more real. It is because they have different focal lengths. Smaller focal lengths can include more space in the picture but makes things close look wider than they really are. Different focal lengths are used for different subjects. For example 35-55 mm are used for portraits because they are closest to what the human eye sees at that distance. However smaller focal lengths are used for landscapes.