My iPhone 14 Pro has been a reliable workhorse — scratched screen, a tiny nick in the aluminum, the usual battle scars of a phone that lives in my pocket with my keys. Every September, those blemishes whisper one thing: upgrade. This year, though, Apple gave me very few good reasons to swap — and a surprising number of design reasons not to.
The iPhone Air is ridiculously thin — and that’s the problem. At 0.22 inches, it’s the phone equivalent of a runway model: great for looks, terrible for anything resembling practical life. Pulling this out of a pocket feels like asking for a passive-aggressive chuckle from other iPhone users. Call me petty, but names matter.
The bigger issue is the camera: a single lens. In a world where more lenses usually mean more photographic flexibility, the Air’s single-camera setup reads like a step backward. Apple leans on machine learning to make up the gap (translation: AI magic), but that’s a risky promise when you want reliably good photos, not “AI slop.” Battery life is worse too, unless you spend another $99 on a MagSafe battery pack — which undermines the whole point of buying a super-thin phone. Add pastel metal finishes that cheapen the look, and you’re left wondering who this phone is for: fashionistas, influencers, or billionaire burners?
The iPhone 17 Pro delivers where it counts on paper. Three 48-megapixel lenses, a Vapor Chamber to keep things cool, and an A19 chip Apple claims is 90% faster than the 14 Pro — plus a beefier battery that supposedly gives you up to 33 hours of video playback (compared with 23 hours on my 14 Pro). Those are real, tangible upgrades.
But then there’s the design. Apple replaced the tidy off-center square camera module with a hulking “plateau” — essentially a doubled-up bump that looks far clumsier than the old square. Below it sits a credit-card-shaped MagSafe area that’s either an awkward stylistic nod to the Apple Card or a failed attempt at functional chic. Either way, it ruins the negative-space minimalism that made the 14 Pro’s back so elegant.
Color choices don’t help. The orange screams pumpkin-spice season, and the rest range from “questionable” to “why?” At $1,200-plus for a 512GB model (and Apple’s trade-in estimate that somehow hovers around $100), I’d be spending a lot to carry something I find less attractive.
If Apple had shipped the iPhone 17 Pro with the 14 Pro’s clean camera square and left the rest alone, I’d be on the upgrade train. But aesthetics matter — they’re part of why we pay flagship prices. Design is the decision-maker here, and this time Apple’s choices pushed me away.
For now I’ll fix the screen, sand down the nick (metaphorical character scar appreciated), and keep enjoying the 14 Pro. Maybe the iPhone Pro 18 in 2026 will have climbed out of this design plateau. Until then: I’m saving my pennies, not trading them in.