Zenless Zone Zero Photo Mode Screenshots Location on PC

All your snaps from around the city!

Photo Mode Screenshots Zenless Zone Zero
Screenshot by Prima Games

Zenless Zone Zero is the latest title from miHoYo to take the world by storm, featuring an urban fantasy setting, a distinct presentation style, and a sizeable cast of characters. It also has a simple photo mode similar to other miHoYo titles that lets players take photos of different NPCs and environments around the city. If you want to access your photos, here is the Zenless Zone Zero photo mode screenshots location on your PC.

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Zenless Zone Zero Photo Mode Screenshots Location

You can access the photos you’ve taken in Zenless Zone Zero at the following location in the main installation folder.

Zenless Zone Zero\ZenlessZoneZero Game\ScreenShot

The ScreenShot folder contains all the photos you have taken with the camera feature in-game, which you can unlock after completing a few tutorial missions.

All the screenshots are pretty high-resolution but come with the default frame, which has the location written at the bottom. Here are a few examples of these.

The photos always include the location where they were taken, but you can choose to hide your username and account ID. As far as we can tell, there is no option to remove the logo from the top left, and the frame can’t be removed or customized.

In the photo mode, you only have the following options

  • Zoom level
  • Reset camera position
  • Hide UI
  • Take photo

There aren’t any filters, posses, post-processing effects, or even camera settings that you can customize here, which is a shame. Even in Hokai Star Rail, the photo mode is pretty basic. We hope that the developers expand its utility and use because it’s currently limited to the main city.

The PC version runs great for the most apart from the Unity crash, which you can fix with a few tweaks. For more on Zenless Zone Zero, make sure to check out our dedicated section.

About the Author

Ali Hashmi

Ali has been writing about video games for the past six years and is always on the lookout for the next indie game to obsess over and recommend to everyone in sight. When he isn't spending an unhealthy amount of time in Slay the Spire, he's probably trying out yet another retro-shooter or playing Dark Souls for the 50th time.