Xiaomi has launched the global version of the flagship Xiaomi 15 Ultra at Mobile World Congress 2025. The Beijing-based manufacturer has undoubtedly upped its game with the optical hardware in the 15 Ultra and joins others in leveraging artificial intelligence techniques. Yet Xiaomi has the equivalent of a power-up for the 15 Ultra that redefines what it means for a phone to be a camera… the Xiaomi 15 Ultra Photography Kit Legend Edition.

Why does this tactile addition stand out in the brave new world of software upgrading the imaging experience?

The Xiaomi 15 Ultra Looks Like A Camera

The Photography Kit comes with two key sections. The first is a protective case that surrounds the Xiaomi 15 Ultra in a traditional manner. It clips around all four corners, with a cut-out for the SIM tray, USB-C port and speaker. This is edged in red with a textured covering across the rear. That rear is dominated by the camera island, which is accentuated by a camera ring to lift it away from the surface you rest the phone on.

The second section is a grip. Holding the phone in portrait orientation, the grip slides over the base and rear of the 15 Ultra when the protective case is attached. The grip doesn’t interfere with the display or the operation of any buttons but does add functionality to the photography suite. It also sports its own 2,000 mAh battery, which can act as a small emergency charger if the main phone drops below a user-set level.

That does add some weight to the grip, but that’s partly the point of the grip. It changes how you hold and how you balance the Xiaomi 15 Ultra when taking picturs. While it does add some weight at the base of the phone, this is a welcome part of the design., because it changes the centre of gravity across the newly transformed phone.

The Xiaomi 15 Ultra Feels Like A Camera

The combination of the grip and the case is. Holding the Xiaomi 15 Ultra in your right hand is much more secure than a pinched grip around a flat smartphone. Your thumb sits on an additional grip bar, allowing pressure between it and your three lower fingers on the grip to lock the smartphone in place.

The altered weight distribution also helps, placing the centre of gravity closer to the securing hand. Contrast that to the standalone smartphone, where you have less purchase and the phone’s weight is pulling itself out of your hand and not into it.

At the other end of the 15 Ultra is the camera island. The case comes with a red cosmetic ring that can be spun off and replaced with a more subtle black ring, but there is a second option where you can screw on an adaptor ring that allows you to add a standard 67mm photographic filter in front of the four lens arrangement of the main camera.

Will this make a difference to those looking for a good smartphone camera? Perhaps not. But professionals looking for a good smartphone will already be thinking about the possibilities this can offer.

The Xiaomi 15 Ultra Acts Like A Camera

In all this, your index finger can reach four physical controls: two buttons, a jog dial, and a rotating dial.

The obvious button is the shutter button. This is a traditional two-stage button, so you can pick up a focus point and move to frame the shot before taking the picture. Around it is a jog dial, offering a traditional way to zoom in and out.

On either side of these core controls, you have two programmable controls. On the left is a simple button, initially set up to start video recording (which sits nicely alongside the camera shutter for fixed photos). On the right you have a dial that can be set for various camera features. It’s initially set up to allow you to set the exposure level manually.

The Impact Of The Xiaomi 15 Ultra Camera Kit

Xiaomi has put together a smartphone that it believes is untouched in the camera space—Forbes’ contributor Prakhar Khanna has taken a closer look at the Xiaomi 15 Ultra and goes into more detail on hardware and software—but it’s the physical transformation that I want to highlight here.

You rarely get smartphones targeting a specialist area. The gaming smartphone is perhaps one of the clear-cut markets where you can tailor a phone’s hardware and software to a specific goal. Every phone launch over the last decade has talked about improving the camera, and the photos and videos the phone can create. We’re at the point where someone saying “oh, this Hollywood film uses footage shot on a phone” is just another day.

When you see the aforementioned shoot, you realise that it’s not someone standing holding up a very slim phone; there are multiple gimbals, steadicam brackets and mounts to get and keep the phone in the right place. The phone is the starting point; the accessories create the final vision.

That’s where Xiaomi’s Photography Kit comes in. It might not be a Hollywood holder, but it takes a smartphone with class-leading optical hardware and adds something that the current crop of generative AI software can never hope to achieve… a physically comfortable camera in a flagship smartphone.

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