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Digital Camera World
Digital Camera World
James Artaius

People really don't "get" the Canon EOS R100 –and I really don't get why

Woman holding a Canon EOS R100 camera.

Canon makes a lot of mirrorless cameras, and the entry point to this ever-expanding ecosystem is the Canon EOS R100. It's a great camera, but a very specific one aimed at a very specific audience – and it seems that some people really don't understand that, choosing to bag on the camera for really bizarre reasons. 

There's a reason I rank the Canon EOS R100 as the best camera for beginners, and the clue is right there: it's a beginner camera. It's not an all-singing, all-dancing performance camera. It's not a camera meant to conquer YouTube. It's not intended to be a professional or intermediate camera (even though you can get professional results out of it, if you know what you're doing).

No, the Canon EOS R100 is – and I don't mean this in any way pejoratively – a stripped-down, basics-first, fundamentals camera, designed solely to be two things: 1) friendly for beginners, and 2) super-affordable, so that newcomers can actually afford it. 

At least one of those two points seems to have been lost on a lot of internet critics. They bemoan the build quality, they scoff at the specs, they create comparisons to other models that are both unfair and completely beside the point. 

Let me make it very simple: this is a camera that, right now, costs $399 in the US and £399 in the UK with a lens. What other mirrorless camera on the market is as affordable as that? This is a direct replacement for the cheap beginner DSLRs that no longer exist – which has always been a gateway drug to get people into photography. 

It has a great 24.1MP image sensor, and a fantastic autofocus system ripped straight from some of the best Canon cameras. Okay, there's no touchscreen interface and its 4K suffers a crop. The former point I agree is a glaring omission, but for Pete's sake – it's a way to keep that 400-buck price tag. 

And as for the video, I truly believe this is intended as somebody's first stills camera – but one that also captures 4K video as an added bonus.

So, don't listen to the haters and naysayers. Yes, the R50 is a better buy if you can afford it – but if you're brand new to photography, you've never picked up a "proper" camera and want to find your footing, the Canon EOS R100 is simply the best (and, crucially, most affordable) way to get started.

(Image credit: Canon)
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