Sony’s new ZV-E10 II camera is designed to sway vloggers away from $1,000 phones
Sony's new ZV-E10 II camera is designed to sway vloggers away from $1,000 phones
Sony’s new ZV-E10 II camera is designed to sway vloggers away from $1,000 phones

Trickle-down economics may be garbage, but Sony remains a steadfast believer when it comes to the tech in its cameras. The new ZV-E10 II continues Sony’s trend of bringing small, iterative changes down from its pricier cameras to more affordable models. Only it’s never without some tradeoffs.
The ZV-E10 II is the APS-C mirrorless system camera follow-up to the original ZV-E10 of 2021, now with a bigger battery, a 26-megapixel backside-illuminated sensor, and improved 4K video. It will also cost $999 for the body or $1,099 in a bundle with Sony’s new PZ 16-50mm f/3.5-5.6 OSS II lens when it launches in early August — right around the price of a flagship phone like the iPhone 15 Pro Max. But, of course, even the best iPhone camera has a sensor about nine times smaller than the APS-C one in the ZV-E10, which is why phones rely on computational tricks to try and compete with the image and video output of dedicated cameras.
While the ZV-E10 II’s $999 price is a bit of a steal compared to the $1,800 FX30 cinema camera it gets its sensor from, it’s also worth noting that it’s actually $200 more than the launch price of the original ZV-E10.
So what does the extra $200 get you over the original ZV-E10 (which you can still get today for an even lower $700)? Aside from its borrowed sensor, the new camera now uses the NP-FZ100 batteries of its full-frame brethren for much-improved battery life. The ZV-E10 II can also record 4K video at up to 30 fps with no crop, whereas the last-gen model limited uncropped filming to 24 fps (stepping up to 4K / 60 still has a slight crop of 1.1x on the ZV-E10 II).
Battery longevity and higher-quality recordings are sure to go a long way in a camera that’s designed for someone to roll lengthy video clips of self-filmed vlogs, but some tradeoffs are made to give the ZV-E10 II these features while keeping its compact dimensions. Namely, the new camera eschews a mechanical shutter (making it mostly useless for taking pictures of subjects in motion since its sensor is not stacked or partially stacked), it lacks any in-body image stabilization (in favor of electronic stabilization), it still lacks a viewfinder, and it didn’t get the AI processing chip of its pricier cousins to further improve the autofocus. So, while the ZV-E10 II has the kind of excellent autofocus that Sony Alphas have been known for, it’s squarely focused on vlogging and video capture compared to other do-it-all hybrid models.
Those shortcomings may be a dealbreaker for someone willing to spend a few hundred dollars more and get Sony’s similar but more versatile A6700, though the ZV-E10 II is designed to be easier to use and more approachable than the cameras from Sony’s A-line of Alpha cameras. Like previous ZV models, it simplifies the controls with more reliance on a touch interface, a Cinematic Vlog mode for a one-tap zero-effort cine look, and dedicated buttons for a “bokeh mode” and Product Showcase autofocusing (the latter is a whole focus mode for YouTube-like videos where someone presents stuff in front of their face).
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Sony wants its ZV cameras to be the logical step up that creators use once they want to move from their phones to a more capable setup, and while it’s not overhauling the playbook it set in motion with the ZV-E1 or ZV-1 II, it’s hard to deny that despite a price increase the ZV-E10 II may offer enough for a vlogger who wants room to grow — and at a price that’s similar to many flagship phones.
Keep an eye out for our video hands-on from Becca Farsace in her upcoming episode of Full Frame.
