A new Nokia smartphone fuses together shots taken simultaneously by five rear cameras to offer owners what it says is "the richest image capture possible".
This lets it preserve details in the highlights and shadows that would otherwise be lost as well as giving more control over depth-of-focus edits than rival devices, it claims.
It can also produce photos with up to 240-megapixel resolution.
Experts, however, warn that it may be a challenging device to market.
"Most store salespeople are not that well trained when it comes to explaining the differences between one smartphone camera system and another," explained Francisco Jeronimo from market research firm IDC.
"But this is not just about selling this device.
"It's about building awareness for the brand by bringing innovation to the portfolio. And it may act as a halo product that drives sales of the firm's other mid-range phones, which are its focus."
Although labelled as Nokia, the handsets are made by HMD Global - a Finnish start-up that has been in business since 2016.
The company had a 3.3% market share in the UK in the last three months of 2018 - according to IDC - making it the fourth bestselling brand after Apple, Samsung and Huawei.
The Nokia 9 PureView was unveiled ahead of the start of the Mobile World Congress trade show in Barcelona and is priced at $699 (£536).
Merged photos
The Nokia 9's five cameras are each 12 megapixels and are complemented by an infrared sensor for depth readings.
Two cameras use a red-green-and-blue (RGB) sensor to capture colour. The other three are monochrome, allowing them to capture nearly three times as much light as there is no need to filter it for the different wavelengths.
Depending on the lighting conditions, the cameras are triggered up to four times in quick succession.
The device then selects one of the colour shots to act as the primary image, and adds detail taken from the other stills.
HMD boasts that by doing this the device can preserve detail within 12.4 stops of dynamic range - a sensitivity measurement where each stop represents a doubling of the brightness level from just-above black to just-below blown-out white.
This still falls short of many dedicated digital cameras, but is a "significantly wider range than any other smartphone out there," according to HMD.
The advantage to owners is that they have more control when editing the exposure of the resulting Raw files because more of the information in the highlights and dimmest parts should have been preserved.
Users can decide which parts of a photo to keep in focus and how blurred other sections should appear
In addition, the phone creates a depth map of the full scene made up of 1,200 planes ranging between 7cm (2.7in) and 40m (131ft).
The company says this compares favourably to competing high-end smartphones that only create 10-layer maps that only cover part of a shot.
In both cases, the devices interpolate between the planes to allow users to determine how out-of-focus the blurred parts of their shots should appear.
But in theory, having the extra data should allow the Nokia 9 to get closer to mimicking the effect traditionally produced by using a more expensive lens and bigger sensor.
Light cameras
The multi-camera set-up is based on technology developed by Light, a Silicon Valley start-up that released the L16 in 2017.
The 16-camera device aimed to offer the benefits of a digital single-lens reflex (DSLR) camera in a much smaller package.
But reviews criticised it for producing inconsistent results with images that were sometimes badly stitched together, featured digital artefacts and suffered from depth-mapping errors.
It never sold well, but Light always suggested it was a stepping stone to bringing its know-how to smartphones.
The Nokia 9 tie-up appears to be the first handset to take advantage of this.
The handset attempts to tackle some of the problems experienced by the L16 by only using cameras with an identical standard wide angle field-of-view.
As a result, users do not have the option of switching to a wider-angled view or a telephoto zoom, which would be more flattering for portraits, as is the case with most smartphones that offer a choice of cameras.
Furthermore, owners have to wait several seconds for each shot to be processed before they can edit it.
This is in part because the device relies on a last-generation Snapdragon 845 processor. But HMD said the time required to have optimised the software for Qualcomm's newer Snapdragon 855 chip would have delayed bringing the phone to market.
In brief tests, the BBC experienced problems with the depth-mapping in several shots, resulting in parts of the image being blurred that should not have been. However, HMD said an updated version of the camera software would be released with the phones.
"Having used the L16, I was disappointed - I struggled to take pictures that were better than a high-end smartphone," commented Ben Wood from the tech consultancy CCS Insight.
"So, the Nokia 9 PureView is the big test for Light's computational photography approach.
"The sheer engineering effort to integrate the platform is impressive but the proof of whether it was worth it will come from the results the Nokia 9 PureView can deliver given the enormous expectations it sets."
Last week, Light also announced that it had partnered with Sony to offer its technology to other smartphone-makers.
It showed off other camera formations and added that its current chipset could capture data from up to six lenses at once.
Light hopes other smartphone manufacturers will adopt its technology
"Smartphone-makers don't seem to be able to help themselves with regards to putting more cameras on a device," Mr Wood added.
"But I think others will wait to see how the Nokia phones get on before they commit."
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