Denash Denash 5K Digital Camera for Photography,75MP HD Review

The Denash 5K offers a 75MP sensor and 5K video for just $72, but its autofocus and stabilization rank in the bottom half of all cameras. It's a high-res specialist on a extreme budget.

Type Mirrorless
Sensor 75MP 75000000
Video 5K
IBIS No
Weather Sealed No
Denash Denash 5K Digital Camera for Photography,75MP HD camera
29.9 Gesamtbewertung

Overview

Let's get straight to the point. The Denash 5K is a $72 mirrorless camera with a 75MP sensor, which puts its resolution in the 79th percentile. That's the headline. It also shoots 5K video, landing it in the 88th percentile for video capability. On paper, those numbers are wild for the price. But you need to know the rest of the story. The camera's overall performance is a mixed bag, with its autofocus and stabilization ranking in the bottom half of all cameras. It's a specialist tool, not a well-rounded performer.

Performance

Performance is all about that sensor and video spec. The 75MP resolution is genuinely high, meaning you can crop in heavily and still have a detailed image. For video, hitting the 88th percentile means it can technically capture more detail than most cameras in its class. But the other numbers tell a different tale. Its autofocus sits at the 44th percentile, so it's not going to keep up with fast action reliably. Stabilization is at the 40th percentile, so forget about smooth handheld shots without a gimbal. Burst shooting is also low at the 38th percentile. This camera is built for one thing: high-resolution stills and video when you have time to set up the shot.

Performance Percentiles

AF 44
EVF 41.3
Build 36.9
Burst 34.8
Video 89.4
Sensor 81.4
Battery 49.7
Display 35.7
Connectivity 34.2
Social Proof 46.1
Stabilization 40

Pros & Cons

Pros

  • The 75MP sensor is in the 79th percentile for resolution, offering massive detail for cropping. 89th
  • 5K video capability scores in the 88th percentile, providing high-resolution video capture. 81th
  • At $72, the price for these core specs is almost unheard of.
  • The 18x optical zoom, if accurate, offers significant reach for a camera at this price.
  • It has a fixed display, which is simpler and potentially more durable than a flip-out screen.

Cons

  • Autofocus performance is only in the 44th percentile, meaning it will struggle with moving subjects. 34th
  • Stabilization ranks at the 40th percentile, so expect shaky handheld video and photos. 35th
  • The build quality is below average, sitting at the 49th percentile.
  • Display quality is low at the 43rd percentile, which makes framing and reviewing shots harder.
  • It's explicitly weak for vlogging, scoring just 29.3 out of 100, due to the poor AF and stabilization.

Specifications

Full Specifications

Sensor

Type Autofocus
Size 75000000"
Megapixels 75

Video

Max Resolution 5K

Value & Pricing

The value proposition is incredibly simple. You are paying $72 for a 75MP sensor and 5K video. That's it. No other camera at this price point offers those raw numbers. The trade-off is that everything else—autofocus, stabilization, build quality—feels like an afterthought to hit that price. If your only goal is to capture high-resolution images on an absolute shoestring budget, this has a unique argument. Just don't expect it to feel or perform like a camera from Sony or Canon.

Price History

$60 $80 $100 $120 Feb 23Mar 22 $114

vs Competition

Compared directly to real cameras, the differences are stark. The Sony a7R IV also has a high-res sensor (61MP) but its autofocus, build, and overall system are in a different universe, though it costs over ten times more. The Fujifilm X-S20 is a much better all-rounder for video and photography, with excellent autofocus and stabilization, but again, it's a $1300 camera. The Denash's real competition might be older used DSLRs or smartphones. A modern phone will have vastly better computational photography, stabilization, and autofocus for everyday shots, but it can't touch the Denash's 75MP resolution for dedicated stills work. You're choosing between a capable tool (a phone or used camera) and a one-trick pony with a very big trick.

Spec Denash Denash 5K Digital Camera for Photography,75MP HD Nikon Z9 Nikon Z 9 FX-Format Mirrorless Camera Body Sony Alpha 7 Sony a7 IV Mirrorless Camera with 28-70mm Canon EOS R6 Canon EOS R6 Mark II Body OM System OM-1 OM SYSTEM OM-1 Mark II Mirrorless Camera Fujifilm X-H2 Fujifilm X-H2 Mirrorless Camera, Black
Type Mirrorless Mirrorless Mirrorless Mirrorless Mirrorless Mirrorless
Sensor 75MP 75000000 45.7MP Full Frame 33MP Full Frame 24.2MP Full Frame 22.9MP Micro Four Thirds 40.2MP APS-C
AF Points - - 759 1000 1053 -
Burst FPS - 30 10 40 120 20
Video 5K 8K 4K 4K 4K 8K
IBIS false true true true true true
Weather Sealed false true true true true true
Weight (g) - 1338 658 590 62 590

Verdict

Here's the data-backed take. If you are a hobbyist who wants to experiment with ultra-high-resolution photography and 5K video for less than $100, and you're willing to use a tripod and manual focus, the Denash 5K is a fascinating curiosity. Its 75MP sensor is legit. But for 99% of people, including vloggers (it scores 29/100 there) or anyone needing reliable autofocus, this isn't the right tool. The low percentiles in AF, stabilization, and build quality make it frustrating for general use. It's a niche pick, not a daily driver.