Ejoyous 75MP 5K Digital Camera, 18X Digital Zoom, Review

The Ejoyous 75MP camera offers staggering resolution for $56, but its slow autofocus and lack of stabilization make it a frustrating choice for almost everything except still life shots.

Type DSLR
Video 5K
IBIS No
Weather Sealed No
Ejoyous 75MP 5K Digital Camera, 18X Digital Zoom, camera
32.5 Overall Score

Overview

So you're looking at the Ejoyous 75MP 5K Digital Camera. It's a DSLR-style camera that promises a massive 75-megapixel full-frame sensor and 5K video for a price that's almost too good to be true. If you're searching for a 'high resolution camera for under $100' or a 'budget 5K camera,' this will definitely pop up. On paper, it sounds like a powerhouse for stills, and the 18x digital zoom is a big selling point for travel or wildlife shots. But let's be real, at this price, there are some big trade-offs you need to know about.

Performance

The sensor is the star here, scoring in the 99th percentile. That 75MP resolution means you can crop in heavily and still have a detailed image, which is great for product photography or landscapes. Video performance is surprisingly decent at the 88th percentile, so 5K footage should look sharp. But the other scores tell the real story. The autofocus is in the 44th percentile, so don't expect it to track fast-moving subjects reliably. There's no in-body stabilization (40th percentile), so you'll need a steady hand or a tripod, especially for video. The burst shooting rate is low (38th percentile), so it's not for action sports. For static scenes, portraits, or controlled product shots, it can deliver. For anything requiring speed or smooth video, it struggles.

Performance Percentiles

AF 44
EVF 50
Build 44.7
Burst 33.6
Video 90.2
Sensor 99.7
Battery 49.6
Display 45.8
Connectivity 34
Social Proof 44.1
Stabilization 37.7

Pros & Cons

Pros

  • Insanely high 75MP resolution for the price 100th
  • Capable 5K video recording 90th
  • 18x digital zoom is useful for distant subjects
  • Very affordable entry point to high-resolution imaging
  • Smile detection is a fun feature for casual use

Cons

  • Digital zoom, not optical zoom, reduces image quality 34th
  • No in-body image stabilization 34th
  • Autofocus is slow and unreliable for motion
  • Fixed, low-resolution screen (43rd percentile)
  • Not weather-sealed, build quality is average

Specifications

Full Specifications

Sensor

Size Full Frame
Megapixels 75

Video

Max Resolution 5K

Display & EVF

Screen Size 3

Connectivity

Wi-Fi No
Bluetooth No

Value & Pricing

At around $56, the value proposition is bizarre. You simply cannot get this resolution anywhere else for this money. It's a tempting gamble if your only goal is to capture ultra-high-res stills of stationary subjects on a razor-thin budget. But you're giving up a lot: reliable autofocus, stabilization, and build quality. For most people, a used smartphone or a older model mirrorless camera from a major brand would be a smarter, more reliable investment, even at twice or three times the price.

$56

vs Competition

Let's name names. Compared to a used Sony a7R IV (61MP), the Ejoyous wins on price and pixel count, but the Sony destroys it in autofocus, build, lens selection, and overall usability. The Fujifilm X-S20, while more expensive, offers fantastic video features, great color science, and stabilization that makes it a true all-rounder, which the Ejoyous is not. Even the older Sony a6400 has vastly superior autofocus and burst shooting for not much more money on the used market. The Ejoyous is a one-trick pony (resolution) against these versatile workhorses.

Verdict

Should you buy the Ejoyous 75MP camera? Only in a very specific scenario. If you are a complete beginner on an extreme budget who wants to experiment with manual settings and ultra-high-resolution stills of things that don't move, and you understand you're getting a toy-like build with major limitations, then maybe. For 99% of people, the answer is no. The lack of stabilization and slow autofocus make it frustrating for daily use. It's not good for vlogging, kids' sports, or low-light handheld shooting. Save up a bit more and buy a used camera from Sony, Canon, or Fujifilm. You'll be much happier.