Minolta MND65 56MP 4K Ultra HD Wi-Fi Selfie Shot Review

The Minolta MND65 offers 4K video and a fun design for under $150, but its photo quality and lack of stabilization hold it back. It's a niche pick for casual creators.

Video 4K
IBIS No
Weather Sealed No
Weight 258 g
Minolta MND65 56MP 4K Ultra HD Wi-Fi Selfie Shot camera
25.9 Overall Score

Overview

So, you're looking at the Minolta MND65, a compact camera that's really trying to be your all-in-one content creator tool for under $200. It's built around a few headline features: a massive 56MP photo resolution, 4K video recording, and a unique selfie lens. The idea is you can shoot high-res photos, record yourself in crisp 4K, and even swap out the front plate for a different color. It's a camera that seems designed for someone who wants a simple, stylish gadget for social media clips and casual travel snaps rather than a serious photography tool. People often search for 'best budget camera for streaming' or 'good vlogging camera under $150,' and this is Minolta's answer.

Performance

Let's talk numbers. The 56MP sensor sounds incredible on paper, but its performance lands in the 34th percentile. In practice, that means photos can look decent in good light, but don't expect the detail and dynamic range of a proper mirrorless camera. For video, it's better, sitting in the 79th percentile. The 4K/60fps is a legit feature for the price, and the video quality is sharp. However, the autofocus is only in the 45th percentile, so it might hunt a bit in video mode, and there's no in-body stabilization (39th percentile), so your handheld clips will be shaky unless you use a gimbal. The benchmarks confirm it's weakest in photography (17.4/100), so it's not the camera for your next photoshoot.

Performance Percentiles

AF 43.5
EVF 50
Build 95
Burst 33.6
Video 76
Sensor 34.7
Battery 49.6
Display 45.7
Connectivity 73.8
Stabilization 37.7

Pros & Cons

Pros

  • 4K/60fps video is a standout feature for the price. 95th
  • Unique swappable faceplates let you customize the look. 76th
  • The dedicated selfie lens makes framing vlogs easy. 74th
  • Wi-Fi connectivity (79th percentile) for quick phone transfers.
  • Solid, well-built feel (98th percentile build quality).

Cons

  • The 56MP sensor doesn't deliver pro-level photo quality. 34th
  • No in-body stabilization makes handheld video very shaky. 35th
  • Autofocus can be slow and unreliable.
  • The fixed display isn't fully articulating for complex angles.
  • Digital zoom is a poor substitute for optical zoom.

Specifications

Full Specifications

Video

Max Resolution 4K

Build

Weight 0.3 kg / 0.6 lbs

Connectivity

Wi-Fi Yes
Bluetooth No

Value & Pricing

At around $150, the MND65 is firmly in the budget category. You're paying for the 4K video and the fun, customizable design. For pure photo quality at this price, you'd be better off with a used older-model DSLR or even a high-end smartphone. But if your main goal is to record decent 4K talking-head videos or stream with a dedicated camera, and you want something more tactile than a phone, this has a niche. Just know you're trading away photo performance and stabilization to get those video specs on a budget.

$150

vs Competition

This camera sits in a weird spot. It's not really competing with the Canon R6 or Sony A7 V—those are professional tools costing ten times as much. Its real rivals are other budget content cameras. The Sony ZV-E10 II is the king here, with a much larger sensor, better autofocus, and proper lens options, but it costs over $800. The Nikon Z30 is another strong contender, offering better overall image quality and a mic jack for around $700. Closer in spirit (and price) might be older used Canon M-series cameras or even just using your latest smartphone, which likely has better computational photography and stabilization. The MND65's advantage is its all-in-one, point-and-shoot simplicity with 4K/60.

Verdict

Should you buy the Minolta MND65? It's a very specific yes or no. If you want a simple, fun, sub-$150 camera primarily for recording 4K video of yourself (think streaming, TikTok clips, basic vlogs) and you don't mind shaky footage or mediocre photos, it's a quirky option. The build is great and the selfie lens is clever. But if you care even a little about photo quality, need reliable autofocus, or want stable handheld video, you should look elsewhere. For most people, a smartphone or saving up for a used Sony ZV-1 or Canon G7 X will be a much better investment. This is a toy for a very specific job.