I swapped my camera for a game controller, and became a better photographer 

Promotional image for OuttaFocus. Hand holding three smart phones.

OuttaFocus

This story is part of Andy Boxall’s OuttaFocus series, covering smartphone cameras and photography.

Updated less than 34 seconds ago

Table of Contents

Table of Contents

How does it help? 

What makes it useful? 

More than a game? 

I don’t trust my photographic instincts, and my life doesn’t always afford me the time to go out and hone them and experiment with my camera. If you have a similar problem, I may have found a way around all this. It requires nothing more than sitting in your living room holding a video game controller. It’s a game called Lushfoil Photography Sim, and it’s like a set of training wheels for your camera. 

How does it help? 

The icon for the Lushfoil Photography Sim game on PS5.

Andy Boxall / Digital Trends

My intention with the OuttaFocus column has always been to demonstrate how mobile device cameras of all types can inspire creativity, and my own journey to try and get better at taking photos. Not in a professional sense, but for personal satisfaction. I’ve always hoped it would also inspire you, the reader, to try new features, devices, or apps too. I know this is a game and not a camera or a phone, but you’ll be as surprised as I was as to how well Lushfoil fulfills my aim.

Over the years I’ve taken photos, the more I experimented and explored, the more I ran into certain problems I found extremely hard to overcome. I’ve written about this already, particularly when I was tasked with photographing a car for a series of articles. I find it really hard to “see” the photographs I know are there, get stuck on taking the “right” picture, and then not taking any of note at all. Eventually, I got past this (most of the time) and understood there is no right or wrong way to take a photo, but the revelation came only after talking to an experienced automotive photographer about it. 

The camera roll screen in Lushfoil Photography Sim.

Andy Boxall / Digital Trends

But putting everything I’ve learned into practice isn’t always easy, and if you don’t practice very often, it takes a while for all the things you’ve learned to come back once you start again. Then there’s the problem of where to take photos. If you’re not visiting somewhere new and exciting, it can be difficult to spot new photo opportunities in familiar areas. Lushfoil Photography Sim is a brilliant way to avoid almost all this, and train your eye to see those elusive photo opportunities out in the real world.

Related

  • A brilliant Google app fixed my problem with the Pixel 9a’s camera

  • I tried Foto, the anti-Instagram, and it’s both wonderful and intimidating

  • Why I’m sad this delightful iPhone camera is about to go away

What makes it useful? 

Manual control panel in Lushfoil Photography Sim.

Manual control panel Andy Boxall / Digital Trends

Lushfoil Photography Sim places you in some of the most picturesque and beautifully evocative places in the world, and leaves you free to walk around equipped only with a camera and your own keen photographic senses. There’s no extensive in-game guidance on what to shoot or where, there are only the most basic of quests, and only a vague path to follow in each location. There’s freedom to climb rocks, hike up the side of a mountain, deal with different weather conditions, and take absolutely any photo you want. 

It nails the excitement of being in a new place where a great photo lies around every corner, and this is where the game worked for me as a training tool. I knew a photo was “there,” I just had to find it — which is exactly the problem I run into in the real world — and the more I spot them, the better I get at finding similar chances again. In Lushfoil Photography Sim, you are encouraged to take your time, and it does a great job of invoking the same emotions you get taking photos with a real camera in a real environment, but because it’s not real, you can slow down, look around, and try new things, all without life’s pressures. 

A photo taken in the Lushfoil Photography Sim game.

A photo taken in the game Andy Boxall / Digital Trends

The accuracy of Lushfoil’s environments and the way it feels like a real photography walk is only the start. It equips you with a DSLR camera (there are other camera types to find in the game too) complete with a manual Pro mode, where you can change the aperture, white balance, exposure, and focus to capture your perfect shot. The alterations you make are recreated on screen, which makes it ideal for newcomers to learn how these settings change your photos. Almost all high-end smartphone cameras have a Pro mode, and Lushfoil Photography Sim introduces you to it in an easy to learn way, where you can endlessly experiment at home. 

More than a game? 

A person holding a PlayStation 5 controller.

Andy Boxall / Digital Trends

Is Lushfoil Photography Sim a game? A simulation? A training tool? A calming way to relax after a long day? It’s all these things, and it cleverly blends enjoyable, relaxing gameplay with minimal pressure to “complete” anything, while at the same time helping you hone your own photography skills ready to put them to use when you next go out with your real camera in your hand. 

It takes what can be impenetrable photo-speak and tools and turns them into more simple concepts controlled not with buttons and knobs on a piece of hardware, but with a familiar controller. It makes the intricacies of photography accessible to the newcomer, removing the hassle of learning not only a new skill, but new controls and hardware too. Pro modes on smartphones are often ignored because they’re presented without any guidance. Lushfoil Photography Sim gives you the guidance that’s missing from them, and gives you amazing locations to experiment, practice, and improve.

The Pro mode and manual adjustments, along with the helpful tutorials, aren’t what kept me playing the game. It has been the environments and the ability to experiment with angles, viewpoints, focus and depth of field in new places that kept me engaged. I got the same satisfaction from taking a photo I was pleased with in the game as I do in real life, and loved the way it made me look so closely at the location to find something new. It’s the practice I need to become a better photographer, in locations filled with opportunity, available at any time.

I played Lushfoil Photography Sim on the Sony PlayStation 5, and it’s available now for $15. It’s also available for Xbox and PC through the Steam store. 

Editors’ Recommendations

  • Lushfoil Photography Sim wants to make photographers out of us all

  • The iPhone 16e made me face a hard truth about mobile cameras

  • Why the mad Nokia 9 PureView is on my mind as I go to MWC 2025

  • This terrible Samsung camera ruined my day out

  • I hated this OnePlus camera mode, but now I see how wrong I was about it




Related posts

Latest posts

iOS 18.5 arrives as Apple edges closer to big iOS 19 reveal

Apple has released iOS and iPadOS 18.5. Here's what's new inside it.

The new macOS update includes a battery boost for Safari

The biggest new feature in the macOS 15.5 update is for developers -- but it will help save battery life on your Mac.

Intel and AMD are already working on their next-gen GPUs, source code reveals

While both Intel and AMD have only recently launched their current-gen GPUs, it seems that the companies are already hard at work on what comes next.

Looking for a $1,000 gaming laptop? Check out this Gigabyte G6 deal

The Gigabyte G6 gaming laptop with the Nvidia GeForce RTX 4060 graphics card and 32GB of RAM is on sale from Best Buy with a $200 discount on its original price of $1,200.

Samsung Galaxy S25 Edge vs. Galaxy S25 Ultra

Here we compare the all-new Samsung Galaxy S25 Edge to the flagship Samsung Galaxy S25 Ultra.

Samsung Galaxy S26 Edge is already being tipped to replace a key sibling next year

Much of the talk this week is about Samsung’s all-new Galaxy S25 Edge. However, attention will soon turn to next year’s Galaxy S26 lineup. The Elec says that the 2026 lineup will look slightly different from the more recent ones, and here’s how. Samsung reportedly plans to replace its Plus smartphone variant with an Edge […]

Sony rolls out a new Xperia 1 phone, but do you really care?

Sony has announced its newest flagship smartphone, the Xperia 1 VII, and it boasts familiar camera specifications with ZEISS optics,

Vivo’s V50 proves that iterative updates can still be fun

With the V50, Vivo has once again shown that it knows how to deliver beautiful mid-range phones with great cameras

It’s not you — Slack was down this morning

Slack users had connectivity and thread loading issues on Tuesday morning, which the company quickly addressed by identifying and resolving

Google Keep finally gets rich text formatting options on the web

Google has rolled out significant updates to its Workspace suite, including the addition of rich text formatting to the web