Hey What's up here, and I've been using Pixel Six and Pixel Six Pro for about three weeks now. And this is it. This is the first year we're expecting a real Google flagship, right? So previous Pixels have been pretty nice and they've had great cameras and pretty cool software features, but overall pretty lackluster hardware. But this is a step up, we're expecting big things, a big new camera array, a new design language. They made their own chip. There's a lot going for it. So this is their moonshot, right? This is their chance to compete with the big dogs. So now that I've used them, I will say these are my favorite Pixels ever. And there are the most Google phones ever made for sure. But, reality check. They're not perfect. And there's definitely some areas where they come up a little bit short. So I'm going to go over those things, but off the top, I just want to hit you with the prices first, okay. So 599$ for Pixel 6, starting, and 899$ for the Pixel 6 Pro those are both at 128 gigs. That's really competitive. So there's a lot of action already at that like $599 price range, but also the one they keep calling a flagship, which is the 6 Pro. This is the one that's here to take shots at the iPhones and Samsung Galaxy S21 Ultra's of the world, and it competes, but the 6 is the real deal. So I've grown to really like this camera bar design for the Pixels, and the fact is, it is polarizing. It doesn't look quite like any other phone, theoretically, you know, the huge new camera sensors need all this thickness here, but it could have looked like any other phone, like the Vivo X70 Pro plus has the same 50 mega Pixels sensor, but they went with a camera rectangle, but this visor, it's a look, this is the, the Pixel phone look now. It's very easily recognizable and I think that's on purpose and they can keep it this way for at least a few years. And the bar design is functional. I will say my index finger does end up resting nicely underneath the camera bar when I'm holding it, which is nice. It doesn't rock on a table either, if you're typing or using it out of your hand, the only weird part is it doesn't quite blend nicely into the aluminum sides of this phone. I think it would have been really cool, if it was a seamless blend, one piece, like what Samson did with the S21 Ultra. But there are a lot of seams all over this camera module, but at the end of the day, if you're just going to toss the case on it, like this grip case from channel sponsored D brand, it's basically just going to cancel the bump anyway, but now you've got, you know, a flat even phone. You've got your icons logos, but it's still obviously a Pixel underneath that. You still have the visor across the back. So I think it's a win unless you think it's incredibly ugly. In which case, try not to look at the back of the phone too much, but come on, visors look cool. But the part you look on the front of the phone is huge, on both screens. Both of these phones are huge. And I think the question naturally is, why didn't they make a smaller one? And I think Google's answer would be, well, there are people who want to spend less on a phone, but most of those people still want a big screen. So they gave it to them. So Pixel Six's screen, is a pretty massive 6.4 inches from corner to corner, 90 Hertz, 10 ADP, and flat, and with pretty small bezels overall and a hole punch in a top middle for the front camera. It's a pretty good screen again for a $600 phone. But how about that flagship though? So with the 6 Pro we're looking at 6.7 inches, 1440 P, and up to 120 Hertz, it is super, super sharp, very responsive and has been an absolute pleasure. But since they're saying it's the flagship, I can get a little more nitpicky here. These curved edges, they're kind of going out of style. I know that gets you even smaller bezels and they are a little bit smaller, but the fact that it gets kind of a bit darker, in the very corners isn't doing the screen any favors. And there also is a little bit of color shift, off axis that you really straight up, just don't see on the more expensive screens, like on the S21 Ultra or the iPhone 13 Pro. Also the fingerprint reader on the display of both of these phones is kind of slow. So it appears to be an optical sensor, shining a light on your finger, instead of those new Ultrasonic ones Samsung is using. And yeah, it's gotten kind of annoying after awhile. Often it will take a full half second, at least long enough for me to get annoyed that I'm waiting for it to read my finger. I think they could have used a better sensor here, or at least one that's a little faster. I am comparing it to thousand dollar phones though. So again, this is what I was talking about earlier. It's impressive that it's hanging with the big dogs, but it is just under cutting it a little bit. Now the top hole punch in the middle of these displays, houses the front camera, it's a pretty decent eight  Mega Pixels wide camera on the Pixel Six, but it's closer to an Ultra wide front on the Six Pro, which I really like a lot. And it's also bumped up to 11 mega Pixels. So you can also shoot 4k front video, it fits more people on the frame, big fan of the 6 Pro's front camera. And then also, you know, the little things, that you sort of expect a great phone to do well, but that you don't want to have to think about too much, like soft click buttons? Check, both phones are fully water resistant, and the haptics are really good on both phones as well. So that's a Pixel thing, but the biggest new piece Google's adding to these phones, it's definitely on the inside. And that would be the new Tensor chip. So designed by Google for this phone, this is going to let them do in theory, things that they couldn't do, with the off the shelf Qualcomm chip they'd used before, you know, machine learning better AI, better computational photography, all kinds of things they want to focus on with just this phone. They can do it. And it's done that. It's really impressive. Now, a lot of people were wondering how Tensor would benchmark, and I don't think that's the right way to think about this new chip, but just out of curiosity, I threw a geek bench at it, and we have the numbers that got 1,035 on single core, 2,800 multi-core, that's maybe eight to 10% slower with the CPU on paper than the Snapdragon triple eight, but also still way, way ahead of the Snapdragon 7 65 G, they used on the Pixel Five last year. But then also I did some GPU benchmarks from 3D mark, and it was looking at 10 to 12% faster than the Snapdragon 888, but that's clearly not what Tensor is about. This might be the biggest, this is what makes it a Google-y phone. This is the biggest difference between the benchmarks and what the phone is actually capable of that I've ever seen. So, first of all, these phones have been really quick and responsive performance, this is the best pixel phone.