Sony Rx100 Mark — 6 Cu

The result? burst shooting with full autofocus and auto-exposure. For a compact camera, that is still, as of 2024, mind-boggling.

Sony realized that in the smartphone era, wide-angle night shots were being eaten alive by Google Night Sight and Apple Deep Fusion. A pocket camera could no longer compete in the dark. But a 200mm optical zoom? Phones still fake that with digital cropping. The RX100 VI offered true, mechanical, optical telephoto reach. What most reviews missed in 2018 was the under-the-hood processing upgrade. The RX100 VI inherited the BIONZ X processor with front-end LSI from the Sony A9 flagship. This is absurd. A pocket camera had the same processing engine as a $4,500 sports monster.

It shoots 4K at 30p (24p in 1080p) with full pixel readout—no line-skipping, which means sharp, moiré-free footage. The addition of HDR (HLG) picture profiles gives you 14 stops of dynamic range in a 1-inch sensor. That’s insane. sony rx100 mark 6 cu

It failed to satisfy the purists. But it succeeded at something harder: it survived. And for the traveler who shoots only in daylight, the parent who chases a fast-moving toddler, or the hiker who wants one camera to see near and far, the RX100 VI is not a compromise. It is the answer.

At 200mm f/4.5, your ISO will jump to 3200 or 6400 very quickly. The 1-inch sensor handles ISO 1600 well. ISO 3200 is noisy. ISO 6400 is emergency-only. If your photography happens after 5 PM or indoors, buy the Mark V or Mark VII instead. The result

To the casual observer, the RX100 VI looked identical to its predecessor. But under the skin, Sony performed a radical operation: they ripped out the beloved fast lens (24-70mm equiv.) and replaced it with a slow, super-telephoto zoom (24-200mm equiv.). The photography community erupted. “Sacrilege,” they cried. “They ruined the best pocket camera.”

Also, the battery (NP-BX1) is laughably small. 240 shots per charge if you’re lucky. With the EVF and constant zooming, you will kill the battery in an afternoon. Buy three spares. It’s a ritual. Sony realized that in the smartphone era, wide-angle

The Mark V had a 24-70mm f/1.8-2.8. That means at wide angle, you could shoot in near-darkness. The Mark VI has a 24-200mm f/2.8-4.5. At the telephoto end (200mm), the maximum aperture is f/4.5—more than a full stop slower than the Mark V’s wide-open aperture.