
If you see artifacts (such as in stars), you might consider falling back to the older DeepPRIME method. This is mandatory if you want the best noise reduction.

The Lightroom integration offers a simple workflow. You also have the same DeepPRIME XD capabilities. If you already have DXO PhotoLab 6 ELITE, you don’t need PureRAW3 unless you’re seeking the Lightroom integration.I cannot process either standard RAW or ProRAW from an iPhone (and do not see any recent iPhone in the official list, but some very old models are supported). Try the demo version or check the camera compatibility list if you use an unusual camera or want to use a Smart Phone.I believe this is an excellent tool for HDR output from a single RAW, as it helps you avoid shadow noise while exposing properly for the highlights in a scene.You can also integrate this tool with Lightroom’s merge to panorama / HDR tool (you just need to run DXO before the LR merge). And you can selectively remove vignetting and chromatic aberration.You can keep the original aspect ratio, keep the maximum area without any blank pixels, or keep everything to let you content-aware fill missing pixels to create the largest possible corrected image. You can choose from 3 methods of lens correction instead of 1.You can now choose from 5 levels of lens sharpening instead of 2 (I’m counting off as an option).It feels like my lenses are much sharper. I find it adds substantial fine detail on ISO 64 images.


When combined with Topaz Gigapixel, you can enlarge your prints to sizes I would never have thought possible. The noise reduction is vastly improved and this has significant benefits to not only high ISO images, but the ability to print any image.
