Like most end of year gear roundups this one is just for fun
and not to be taken too seriously. I have not reviewed most of the cameras and
lenses described so most of my comments are based on specifications, product
photos and published reviews.
Canon appears to
have produced the best and worst cameras of the year.
The EOS R6.3 narrowly edges out the Sony a7.5 as best new
camera of the year. The R6.3 has everything a professional or enthusiast
amateur photographer could want. Very
good ergonomics, excellent image quality and performance for stills or video in
a very well designed package.
On the other hand the Ixus/Elph 360 HS A is a reworked
version of the 2016 Powershot 360 HS but with fewer features and a higher
price. It was not a very good camera in 2016 and they made it worse. Seriously…..??????
The EOS R50V is a vlogging/video oriented model which has
been well reviewed and appears to be a solid entry in this market space.
I owned and used a Powershot V1 for a while. It is another
vlogging/video oriented model which also happens to make good stills. I found
it has good image quality, autofocus and overall performance and is generally
enjoyable to use. The very wide angle zoom lens works well indoors where the
lack of a viewfinder is not a problem. But outdoors in the Sydney sun I find it
almost unusable even with the screen brightness at its not-very-bright maximum.
The RF 45mm f1.2 full frame lens created a bit of buzz with
its very wide aperture and low price. Unfortunately as reported by Youtuber
Christopher Frost and others this thing comes with severe focus shift as the
aperture is closed down, very strong field curvature and strong chromatic
aberration. I would avoid this one
unless for some reason you like creating wildly out of focus images.
What’s next for Canon One of the most eagerly awaited new products
of 2026 is the EOS R7.2. If this comes with most of the rumored specifications
and performance it will be a game changer for
the Canon APSC lineup. If Canon adds a couple of high quality enthusiast
zooms that will add to the appeal of APSC as a viable alternative to full frame
for many of us.
I think Canon also might do well to respond to consumer
demand for enthusiast level compact and bridge models with built in EVF, of
which there are currently none in the Canon catalogue.
They have hinted at the possibility of a retro style model
at some stage. I am old enough to have used these “retro” cameras when they
were the latest thing and have no interest at all in going back to their clunky, uncomfortable handling
and ergonomics.
Fujifilm delivered some interesting models in 2025.
The X-T30.2 seems as though it would be a decent enough
camera for those who like it’s control layout. However it does not move camera
design anywhere in particular and has
been reported to have numerous handling and ergonomic foibles.
The X-E5 does much the same thing at a higher price point. I
think this one might appeal to a few rusted-on Fujifans who are happy to buy a
camera then find they need to equip it with an aftermarket grip and thumb
support to make it reasonably enjoyable to operate. But there are plenty of
cameras from other makers in the same
price range which offer better handling, ergonomics, autofocus and performance.
The X-Half model strongly competes with the Canon Ixus/Elph
360 HS A for my worst camera of the year award. But in the end I decided to
give the X-Half it’s own special award of Silliest
camera of 2025.
The medium format GFX 100 RF compact model gets yet another
award, this time for the biggest
missed opportunity of 2025. If ever a camera demanded to have a stabiliser either in the lens or body, this
is it. A compact, hand held 100 megapixel super street camera is partly
crippled without a stabiliser. Fujifilm knows how to do stabilisers. In
Australia Fujifilm is asking around AUD8000 for this thing.
What’s next for
Fujifilm ? I think that Fujifilm has dug itself into an awkward place in 2025.
It seems to me they have too many models which overlap each other as to
specifications, design and price point. I understand they are trying to cover
every market niche but I wonder if that is a viable strategy for a low volume producer.
They have DSLR style cams with traditional controls, modern controls, high Mpx,
low Mpx, silver top, black top, high price and low price. Then they have
rangefinder types with and without EVF, silver top, black top, high Mpx, Low Mpx,
high price, low price. This produces a proliferation of models each of which is
missing something which can be found on another model.
Even their overpriced top model the X-H2 comes in two
versions, one with high pixel count, the other with high performance and even
higher price. What is the point ? Nobody
can tell the difference between the image quality of the 40Mpx sensor and that
of the 26Mpx sensor. Other camera makers are delivering models which deliver excellent image quality, performance,
autofocus, handling and ergonomics, all in one thoughtfully designed package
which is less expensive than the Fujifilm offering.
Fujifilm weathered the seismic shift from film to digital
while Kodak failed. Then they made the giant decision around 2010 to exit the
compact and bridge camera market in favour of the high end compact X-100 series
and X-Trans APSC models. I think
Fujifilm is at yet another big decision point in their interesting history.
Their best selling range is Fuji Instax instant film models, not digital
cameras.
I have no idea which way Fujifilm will go but wish them well
on the next stage of their often perilous voyage into the future.
Hasselblad delivered a Mark 2 version of their X2D100C
medium format hand held model, with all round improved performance, to
generally positive acclaim. I like Hasselblad’s approach to menu design and layout, which I think other camera makers
would do well to emulate.
Hasselblad is owned by the Chinese drone and gimbal maker
DJI which has just been banned in the USA as an alleged security risk.
I don’t know what that means for Hasselblad. I do know that
we can buy a Fujifilm GFX100S.2 kit with a decent zoom lens and the same sensor
and image quality as the Hasselblad for about half the price with no
disadvantage against the Hasselblad as far as I can tell from reviews.
Leica continued its merry way of offering models
with fewer features at a higher price in the form of the Q3 Mono. The M-EV1 was inevitable, I guess and a long
time coming. The SL3-S is a version of the full frame mirrorless SL3 with fewer
pixels and faster performance. Most reviewers point out that the SL3S is
essentially a rebodied version of the Panasonic Lumix S52X at a higher price.
However Leica buyers tend not to be concerned by price as long as it is high.
I have no idea what the future holds for Leica buyers.
Here’s a guess….really expensive cameras and lenses, packed in fancy boxes.
Nikon released a
mark 2 version of their well regarded Z5 model. DP Review gave it a Gold
award and described the Z5.2 as “almost unimaginably good for a camera priced
under USD 2000”. High praise indeed making this one of the best value
mirrorless interchangeable lens models on the market right now.
We also saw the ZR, a full frame cinema camera model without
EVF, co-branded with RED which was recently acquired by Nikon. This one has
been well reviewed, suggesting that Nikon is getting serious with its cinema camera ambitions.
The Coolpix P1100 is actually just a re-release of the CP100
with a USBC port. This is very much a niche product with a huge lens beaming
light onto a tiny sensor. Apparently it makes good pictures of the moon if that
is your thing.
What’s next for Nikon
? They have now developed a
comprehensive and well regarded catalogue of full frame MILCs and lenses.
Logically the next project would be building up their APSC offering of both cameras and lenses. We
shall see.
OM System is the demerged spin-off of the former camera
division of Olympus, which now concentrates on the much more profitable medical
optics market.
In 2025 we saw the OM5.2 MILC which is a mildly reworked
version of the 2022 OM5.1 which was a mildly reworked version of the 2019
Olympus OM-D EM5.3. So although most reviewers found the OM5.2 to be a decently
good camera it is really just a re-housing of existing technology.
The OM3 is basically an OM1.2 re-housed in a classic Olympus
SLR style body with a flat front and no
handle. Some reviewers like it, others are less enthusiastic. I used flat front cameras like this for years in the
middle of the 20th Century when they were the main game. These days
I would not use a camera like this if you gave it to me.
What, if anything, is
next for OM system ? There appears
to be a lack of R&D capability at OM System which inherited the Olympus
camera catalogue in 2022. The few models which OM has released since then have
been re-worked versions of previous Olympus models.
There appears to be nothing fundamentally bad about or wrong with OM cameras as they
stand at the moment. But there are lots of APSC and even full frame models
available at similar prices and with similar dimensions. So it remains unclear
to me whether OM System and the Micro Four thirds standard has much of a
future. We shall see.
Panasonic Lumix
offered three version of the same full frame mirrorless interchangeable lens
camera this year, the S1.2, S1.2E and S1R.2. When I look through the specifications my eyes
glaze over and I lose interest. One of them has more pixels than the other two.
They are full frame hybrid stills/video models with a strong emphasis on video
capability, including a cooling fan. Each is reported to lag behind models from
other makers with respect to autofocus performance.
I don’t get it. Pana-Lumix is a niche player in a niche
industry. They lack the volume to generate much R&D budget. Surely the
smart play for them would be to concentrate on a few models each refined
through incremental upgrades.
What if anything, is
next for Pana-Lumix ? I was an
early adopter of Pana-Lumix Micro Four Thirds cameras in 2009 and stuck with
them for ten years through many sub-standard low-performing models until I gave
up on Lumix and went back to Canon which finally developed the excellent Dual Pixel
Phase detect AF system first seen on the EOS 70D of 2013 and since evolved on
the RF mount to be one of the best AF systems in the business.
Pana-Lumix has had a model muddle problem right from their
first foray into digital photography in 2001. From then until the great crash
of 2012 Pana-Lumix churned out a profusion of compacts, bridge cams and MILCs
in what looks to me as a consumer like a scatter-gun approach, hoping to hit
some kind of target, somewhere, sometime. Their M43 models got larger and more
expensive then they launched into full frame territory with the DC S1 of 2019.
When I trawl through the Pana-Lumix models available new
today I cannot get a sense of what the Lumix brand is about and where it might
be headed.
We have two of the worst cameras of 2024, the TZ99 which is
a TZ90 with the EVF removed and the FZ80 D which is a minimal update of a much
older and decidedly mediocre model bridge cam. Then there is a collection of
Micro Four Thirds models including the large, expensive full frame size G9.2,
GH5 and GH7 plus the G97 which is a very slight update of an old and very much
outdated model with the old DFD contrast detect AF.
As for full frame MILCs we have a confusing model muddle
which includes the S9, S5.2, S5.2X, S1.2, S1.2E and S1R.2.
The only Pana-Lumix model which holds to the original Micro
Four Thirds concept of good quality in a light, compact package is the G100D
which in Australia appears not to be available in camera stores but in consumer
electronics outlets.
On top of all this Panasonic Global Corporation has been in
financial trouble for several years due to erosion of their market share in
consumer electronics by Competition from China.
So I wish Panasonic and its imaging division the very best
but I think they need to make some major decisions if the Lumix brand is to
survive.
Pentax is still
in business although owned by Ricoh since 2011. And it appears they are still
making some cameras including DSLRs and waterproof compacts, one of which the
WG-8 was released in 2025.
Ricoh is a large multinational corporation which
seems to deal mainly in office and commercial services, equipment and printing
solutions. They also have a hobby business making and selling a very limited
range of niche cameras. Apart from the Pentax DSLRs these include the Ricoh GR
ultra-compact APSC series, a range of rugged industrial compact models and the
Theta 360 degree rotating models.
In 2025 they released the much anticipated GR4 and some
variations including the GR4Mono and GR4HDF.
The GR4 is actually a completely new camera with a new body,
lens, sensor, processor, IBIS, AF and battery plus a substantial boost to
internal memory. However it sticks closely to the tried and tested GR formula,
closely resembling the GR2 in control layout.
I had the GR2 and GR3 a while back and found them to be
interesting cameras capable of very good image quality but they were largely
unusable outdoors in Sydney with no EVF and only a rudimentary and expensive
optical viewfinder.
The feature I like most in these cameras is snap focus. I
wish all cameras had this capability which is very useful for quick shot street
and crowd type photography.
I guess Ricoh is going with the old aphorism if it ain’t broke, don’t fix it, which seems reasonable.
Even so I would like to see a variant on the GR4 theme with a proper built in EVF
which might expand the potential market for this interesting camera series.
Sigma’s main
business is making excellent camera lenses.
They released many of these in 2025 with
most receiving very high marks from most reviewers. I have the 18-50mm f2.8 and
the 10-18mm f2.8 for Canon RF-S models. These are very nice compact, sharp
optics which are able to do justice to the high pixel count of the Canon EOS
R7.
They also released the very ambitious 16-300mm f3.5-6.7 for
APSC bodies. I bought one of these and was underwhelmed by its capability. It
delivered decent results at the wide end and middle of the zoom range but
sharpness and contrast fell away noticeably at the long end. It is a big heavy
thing which did not remain long in my camera bag. I find the Canon RF-S
18-150mm a much better do-most-things general duties lens.
The 17-40mm f1.8 DC Art for APSC cameras received a very
favourable reception from reviewers and lens afficionados, however it is much
larger, heavier and more expensive than the 18-50mm f2.8 with no reported image
quality benefit at most equivalent apertures.
Sigma also has a camera making hobby which has resulted in
production of some of the strangest photographic devices ever seen. In 2019 it
was the Sigma fp (which stands for fortissimo-pianissimo, go figure)
Sigma’s contribution for 2025 is the BF which I kid you not
Sigma says stands for “Beautiful Foolishness”. I have to agree with the
“foolishness” part of this and acknowledge that the “Beautiful” part is in the
eye of the beholder. This camera almost tied with the Fujifilm X-Half for my
silliest camera award.
What’s next for Sigma
? I hope and expect they will
continue making excellent lenses which we can enjoy using. Maybe after five
years they will come out with another silly camera. Bravo Sigma.
Last but certainly not least we come to Sony. This year Sony
released the a7.5, a full frame mirrorless interchangeable lens model very
similar in specifications and performance to the Canon EOS R6.3. For a buyer
who likes the Sony user interface and is already invested in FE lenses this camera makes a compelling case for
itself. According to all reviews, it does everything well and could be the only
hybrid stills/video camera a professional or enthusiast amateur might ever
need.
They also released the compact full frame fixed lens RX1R.3,
successor to the RX1R1 and RX1R2. This new iteration of the RX1R line has 60
Mpx but uses the same lens as the original which had only 24 Mpx. It has a low spec EVF, no stabiliser
and cramped controls with no handgrip or thumb rest. In Australia Sony wants
you to pay AUD8000 for this distinctly un-appealing little device. Give this
one a miss.
The FX2 looks more promising. This is a fully featured
cinema camera using the same or similar full frame sensor as the a7.4. It has
all the bells and whistles required for high quality video performance. It also
includes a large tilting EVF which could be very useful for low angle work or
in bright light when the screen is hard to see.
What’s next for Sony
? For the first 20 or so years of
the digital camera era, Sony made most of the running on technological
development, with other makers struggling and sometimes failing to catch up. If
we look on the DP Review website to check out cameras produced in the early
days of digital photography we can see that Sony experimented with many
different types of architecture and technology before settling on the products
which are available today. Ergonomics
and the user interface has never been Sony’s strong point with many of their
cameras pushing the limits of compact dimensions to the detriment of handling.
Many Sony cameras continue to suffer from the legacy of this pre-occupation
with compactness at the expense of ergonomics. I think Sony would make more
friends if they increased the width and effective handle height of their
cameras to make them more comfortable to hold and provide a less cramped platform
for the control layout. I think that they could house their top tier APSC
model, currently the a6700, in the same body
as their full frame A7.x line, for a better ergonomic experience.
Some makers have caught up to Sony in the technology race,
notably Canon and to some extent Nikon, eroding Sony’s main advantage.
Globally, Sony Corp has shifted its efforts from consumer
electronics to gaming, music, imaging sensors and movies. Perhaps this accounts
for an apparent slow-down in the rate of new product development in the camera
division. Maybe they are just gearing up
for the next great big imaging thing. There are plenty of rumors along those
lines. We shall see.

Thanks for so many reviews and outlooks.
ReplyDeleteAll the best for the New Year 2026!
Antonio - Barcelona -Spain
goog blog
ReplyDeletePrama PT-NC120D3-N(D2) – 2MP Full HD Bullet Network Camera
Prama PT-NC120D3-WNM(D2) – 2MP Smart Dual Light Bullet IP Camera with Mic
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The Sony ergonomics problem is the grip concept, the indentation/groove on the grip which makes the camera rotate aroung the middle finger knuckle area. Resulting in a pinch like grip. Filling your hand but not feeling comfortable to the point of a hurting middle finger over hours. If they add more of an inverted L grip, like canon, the camera doesnt rotate so much on the knuckle, it rests more on top of the finger and hand then. For this to work in a small body, they need to move the front dial, either on top like canon or around the shutter button like olympus. Think about it :) For a longer grip, just add a bottom plate, but it won't solve the pinch grip design.
ReplyDeleteYes maybe there is a space problem for bigger hands with the GM lenses, maybe needing to revisit to Fullframe designs, but hell no don't make the rangefinder a6700 and apsc cameras bigger, its what sets them appart. Otherwise they are just entry level cameras, currently they are more compact cameras for more compact lenses. Just dont put FE lenses on it and your fine.