Canon EOS M200 Compact Mirrorless Digital Vlogging Review

The Canon M200's autofocus is magic, but its lack of stabilization and plasticky build hold it back. It's a great first camera, but you'll quickly want more.

Type Mirrorless
Sensor 24.1MP APS-C
Video 4K
IBIS No
Weather Sealed No
Weight 299 g
Canon EOS M200 Compact Mirrorless Digital Vlogging camera
43 Общая оценка

Overview

The Canon M200 is a weird little camera. It's got a fantastic sensor and some of the best autofocus you can get, but it's wrapped in a body that feels like a toy and lacks some basic features. The one thing you need to know? This is a killer camera for a beginner who wants amazing photo quality without any fuss, but you'll outgrow it fast if you get serious about video or want to feel like you're holding a real tool.

Performance

The autofocus is the star here. It's in the 96th percentile, and it shows. Eye AF locks on and sticks to your subject like glue, which is wild for a camera at this price. But the lack of in-body stabilization is a real drag, especially for video. Your 4K footage will look sharp, but it'll be shaky unless you're on a tripod or have super steady hands.

Performance Percentiles

AF 89.7
EVF 42.8
Build 6.1
Burst 36.5
Video 66.1
Sensor 81.8
Battery 48.2
Display 76.4
Connectivity 33.4
Social Proof 83.4
Stabilization 40.8

Pros & Cons

Pros

  • Autofocus is shockingly good and makes shooting easy. 90th
  • The 24MP APS-C sensor delivers crisp, clean photos. 83th
  • The flip-up touchscreen is perfect for vloggers and selfies. 82th
  • It's small and light enough to throw in any bag. 76th

Cons

  • No in-body stabilization makes video a shaky mess. 6th
  • The build quality feels cheap and plasticky. 33th
  • Battery life is just okay, so pack a spare.
  • No viewfinder, which is a dealbreaker for some shooters.

Specifications

Full Specifications

Sensor

Type CMOS
Size APS-C
Megapixels 24.1

Autofocus

Eye AF Yes

Video

Max Resolution 4K

Display & EVF

Touchscreen Yes

Build

Weight 0.3 kg / 0.7 lbs

Value & Pricing

At its current price of around $813, it's a tough sell. You're paying for that excellent sensor and AF system, but you're missing core features like stabilization. For pure stills quality on a budget, it's impressive. But if you care at all about video or a robust feel, your money goes further elsewhere.

Price History

800 $ 805 $ 810 $ 815 $ 820 $ 825 $ 23 февр.17 апр. 813 $

vs Competition

The Sony a6400 is its direct rival and the better camera for most people. It has a viewfinder, better build quality, and more advanced video features, though its menu system is more complex. The Fujifilm X-S20 is a step up in price but adds in-body stabilization and Fuji's famous film simulations, making it a much more complete package for hybrid shooters. The M200 wins on sheer autofocus simplicity and the Canon color science, but that's about it.

Verdict

Only buy the M200 if you're a complete beginner who values dead-simple operation and stunning photo quality above all else, and you don't plan to shoot much video. For everyone else, especially at this price, the Sony a6400 or saving up for a Fujifilm X-S20 is a smarter move. This camera is brilliant in one very specific way, but frustratingly limited in most others.