Blackmagic Blackmagic Design PYXIS 12K Cinema Camera (ARRI Review

The Blackmagic PYXIS 12K captures a breathtaking image, but only if you're willing to spend thousands more building a rig around it. This is a tool for sets, not for run-and-gun shooters.

Sensor 98.8MP
Video 8K
IBIS No
Weather Sealed No
Weight 1600 g
Blackmagic Blackmagic Design PYXIS 12K Cinema Camera (ARRI camera
44.3 Overall Score

The 30-Second Version

A no-compromise cinema sensor in a box, priced for pros and punishing for everyone else. If you have to ask if you need it, you absolutely do not.

Overview

The Blackmagic PYXIS 12K is a purebred cinema camera that makes zero compromises for anyone outside a professional film set. The one thing you need to know is this: it's a sensor and a recording system in a box, and it expects you to bring everything else. Forget vlogging, forget casual photography. This thing exists to capture the absolute highest quality moving images possible, and in that singular goal, it's one of the best on the market. With a massive 98.8MP full-frame sensor capable of 12K open gate Blackmagic RAW and a claimed 16 stops of dynamic range, it's built for DPs and colorists who live in DaVinci Resolve.

Performance

The sensor performance is, predictably, the absolute best right now. That 99th percentile video score isn't a fluke. The 12K open gate footage is stunningly detailed, and the 16-stop dynamic range gives you incredible latitude in grading. What surprised us, looking at our database, was how mediocre everything else is. The autofocus and stabilization are underwhelming, the battery life is middle of the pack, and it has no viewfinder. It's a stark reminder that Blackmagic put every single dollar into the image pipeline and told you to figure out the rest.

Performance Percentiles

AF 42.9
EVF 42.7
Build 69.4
Burst 36.6
Video 99
Sensor 89.3
Battery 48.4
Display 76.7
Connectivity 81.2
Social Proof 35.9
Stabilization 40.9

Pros & Cons

Pros

  • Strong video (99th percentile) 99th
  • Strong sensor (89th percentile) 89th
  • Strong connectivity (81th percentile) 81th
  • Strong display (77th percentile) 77th

Cons

The Word on the Street

4.5/5 (3 reviews)
👍 Early adopters who've built proper rigs around it are blown away by the flawless 12K image quality with no banding.
👎 There's widespread frustration over the lack of basic features like built-in NDs, making it feel incomplete out of the box.
🤔 Users love the image but are constantly warning newcomers about the massive additional investment needed for batteries, handles, and monitors.

Specifications

Full Specifications

Sensor

Type 35.64 x 23.32 mm (Large Format) CMOS
Megapixels 98.8

Shooting

Electronic Shutter Yes

Video

Max Resolution 8K

Display & EVF

Screen Size 4
Touchscreen Yes

Build

Weight 1.6 kg / 3.5 lbs

Connectivity

Wi-Fi No
Bluetooth Yes
USB USB-C

Value & Pricing

At $5,495 for the sensor and brain, it's an insane value for a working cinematographer who already owns a cage, monitors, and V-mount batteries. For anyone else, it's a money pit waiting to happen. The value is entirely in the image, not the experience.

$5,495

vs Competition

Don't even look at hybrid cameras like the Sony a1 or Canon R6 Mark III. They're for a different planet. The real competition is other cinema boxes. The PYXIS trades blows with something like a used RED Komodo. The Komodo has a global shutter and better low-light, but the PYXIS has higher resolution and a much better touchscreen interface. Against Blackmagic's own Ursa Cine 12K, the PYXIS is the more modular, rig-friendly option, while the Ursa is more of a traditional all-in-one camera body.

Spec Blackmagic Blackmagic Design PYXIS 12K Cinema Camera (ARRI Sony Alpha 1 Sony a1 II Mirrorless Camera Nikon Z6 Nikon Z6 III Mirrorless Camera with 28-400mm f/4-8 Canon EOS R6 Canon EOS R6 Mark II Mirrorless Camera Fujifilm X-H2 FUJIFILM X-H2 Mirrorless Camera Panasonic LUMIX GH7 Panasonic LUMIX GH7 Mirrorless Camera with 12-35mm
Type - Mirrorless Mirrorless Mirrorless Mirrorless Mirrorless
Sensor 98.8MP 50.1MP Full Frame 24.5MP Full Frame 24.2MP Full Frame 40.2MP APS-C 25.2MP Four Thirds
AF Points - 759 299 1053 425 315
Burst FPS - 30 20 40 20 75
Video 8K 8K @120fps 5K @120fps 4K @60fps 8K @60fps 5K
IBIS false true true true true true
Weather Sealed false false true true true false
Weight (g) 1600 658 669 590 590 726

Common Questions

Q: How fast is the sensor readout? Does it have bad rolling shutter?

It's decent for a sensor this big. In 12K mode it's about 24ms, and in 8K/4K it drops to a more manageable 13.5ms. You'll see some skew with fast pans, but it's not the worst we've seen.

Q: Does it come with the top handle or viewfinder shown in pictures?

Nope, that's all marketing. The box you get is just the camera core. Handle, EVF, even a proper battery solution are all extra. Budget another $2k minimum to make it usable.

Q: Can I use it for photography?

Technically yes, but it's a terrible stills camera. No burst mode to speak of, no viewfinder, and it's built like a brick. Use a real mirrorless camera for photos.

Who Should Skip This

If you're looking for an all-in-one camera to shoot documentaries, weddings, or YouTube videos, this isn't it. The lack of stabilization, autofocus, and NDs will drive you mad. Go get a Panasonic Lumix GH7 or a Sony FX3 instead. They're complete tools that work right out of the box.

Verdict

We recommend the Blackmagic PYXIS 12K only if you are a professional cinematographer or DIT building a custom rig for narrative, commercial, or high-end documentary work. You need to understand the ecosystem and the additional costs. If that's you, this is one of the most powerful image-making tools you can get for the money. For everyone else, it's the wrong tool, full stop.