A new video from leaker John Prosser shows what appears to be the iPhone 18 Pro from multiple angles, and the headline changes are exactly the kind Apple hates seeing early: a smaller Dynamic Island, a dark cherry finish, and a cleaner Camera Control button. The clip also lines up with earlier talk that Apple is keeping the overall body design familiar rather than attempting a dramatic redesign.
Prosser is hardly an anonymous internet mood board. Apple has already sued him over a separate iOS 26 design leak, which makes this latest round of renders awkward for everyone involved and a little more credible than the usual fan-fiction parade.
What the iPhone 18 Pro leak shows
The biggest visual change is the front cutout, which Prosser says will shrink by about a quarter compared with the iPhone 17 Pro. That is the sort of tweak Apple likes to bill as refinement, because it lets the company pretend the phone is evolving while mostly keeping the silhouette customers already recognize.
The same leak points to a variable aperture in the main rear camera, a feature that should help the phone adapt better to bright and dim scenes without leaning entirely on software tricks. Apple has spent years pushing computational photography; adding hardware flexibility would be a sensible next step, and one that rivals have already used in one form or another.
There is also a reported simplification of the Camera Control button. According to Prosser, it would keep only pressure sensitivity and drop the capacitive layer, which sounds less fancy on paper but could be easier to live with in daily use.

iPhone 18 Pro Max battery and connectivity
The Pro Max model is said to get a larger battery of about 5200 mAh, while both phones are expected to use Apple’s new C2 modem and support 5G via satellite. Those are the sorts of upgrades that matter more than a new paint job, even if they get fewer social posts.




Apple’s familiar iPhone 18 Pro design playbook
There is no sign of a major chassis rethink here. Earlier reports say Apple will stick with an aluminum body in the next generation, which fits the company’s usual rhythm: save the big visual drama for the marketing cycle, then quietly spend the rest of the year shaving millimeters and polishing edges.
If this leak is accurate, the real story is not a radical new iPhone shape. It is Apple making incremental moves where they actually count – display cutout, camera hardware, battery, and connectivity – while leaving the industrial design reassuringly intact. That approach usually sells well, even if it is not the kind of thing that makes a keynote crowd gasp.
The open question is whether the smaller Dynamic Island and upgraded camera hardware will feel like meaningful upgrades in daily use, or just the sort of spec-sheet polish that looks better in renders than in a user’s hand.

