With the X-H2S, Fujifilm has a new flagship camera. It has a new 26.2-megapixel stacked sensor that delivers shooting speeds up to 40 fps in electronic shutter mode. At the same time, it has the most advanced video features of any APS-C camera, with up to 6.2K video, 4K 120p and 1080 240p. It also offers in-body stabilization, a high-resolution EVF, CFexpress support and more. The main drawback, and it’s a small one, is that the autofocus still isn’t quite as fast as we’ve seen on Sony and Canon’s latest APS-C cameras.
Pros: Fast shooting, good handling, high image quality, minimal rolling shutter, excellent video capabilities
Cons: Expensive, stabilization not great for video, autofocus behind Canon and Sony
Subscribe:
Like us on :
us on :
us on :
us on TikTok:
The Engadget Podcast:
More about Engadget Audio:
Read more:
Credit: YouTube/Engadget