If you just ordered one of Apple’s glossy new iPhone 17 Pro models — especially the deep blue finish — you might want to add a slim case to your cart before the phone even ships. Multiple durability tests and early retail reports suggest the anodized aluminum finish around the camera plateau’s sharp corners chips and scuffs far more easily than users (and Apple) probably expected.
The loudest alarm bell came from Zack Nelson of JerryRigEverything, who put the 17 Pro and 17 Pro Max through a classic pocket-and-keys style scratching routine on his channel. Nelson’s takeaway: the anodized layer that gives the new phones their color “does not stick to corners very well,” and the sharp, un-rounded edges Apple chose for the camera plateau create a ready-made weak point. In his video, you can see everyday objects — coins, keys — quickly catch and flake the coating away at those corners, even though the flat areas of the plateau tolerate similar rubbing with only removable residue.
This isn’t just one YouTuber’s nightmare scenario. Bloomberg’s reporters visited Apple stores in several major cities and found demo units showing visible scuffs and chips after only a few hours on display, particularly in the deep blue Pro models and the black iPhone Air. That helps explain why the story moved fast: it wasn’t isolated to a lab; it was happening on retail floors with real shoppers handling demo phones.
Why do the edges fail first? The short answer is materials and geometry. Anodizing — the electrochemical process that creates a colored oxide layer on aluminum — can produce beautiful, durable finishes, but it’s mechanically weaker on sharp corners unless the design includes a small radius or chamfer to let the oxide layer “wrap” smoothly. Industry best practices often recommend rounding or filleting corners for exactly this reason; the flat, squared camera plateau appears to prioritize a clean silhouette over long-term abrasion resistance. That design choice is what reviewers are calling out as a conscious trade-off.
Users online and across forums have started calling the episode “Scratchgate,” posting photos of chipped paint and nicked camera corners. Coverage from the usual Apple sites and tech outlets shows the same pattern: darker, more matte finishes make the raw silver metal underneath the scratched anodized layer more obvious, which makes minor nicks look worse than similar wear on a glass or titanium surface would. For most people, the damage is cosmetic — it won’t stop the camera or phone working — but it changes how the phone looks and ages.
So, what should buyers do? The simplest option is a case. A thin bumper or case that covers the camera plateau’s edges will stop keys and coins from contacting those corners and prevent the chipping that’s been cropping up in store demos and durability videos. For people who want to show the phone off without a case, the reality is accepting a quicker-to-develop patina: little chips and scuffs will accumulate with normal pocket carry. Reviewers and some analysts note that many customers don’t make cases mandatory and that cosmetic issues rarely sink sales — though that won’t comfort owners who expected the finish to stay pristine.
Will Apple change course? That’s harder to say. Material and finish decisions are baked into the engineering and manufacturing pipeline long before a product ships. Apple could tweak future runs (different anodizing parameters, a slightly rounded plateau, or alternative finishes) if enough customers complain, but changing a mass-produced part mid-cycle isn’t trivial. For now, the practical fix lives in accessories, not in a factory recall.
Bottom line: the iPhone 17 Pro’s new look is eye-catching, but the very edges that give it that “designed” appearance are also where the anodized color is most vulnerable. If you plan to pocket your phone with keys or want a flawless finish out of the box, a protective case is low-hassle insurance. If you’d rather go naked, expect that the phone’s aesthetic will evolve — and for some, that patina will be part of the story.
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