Canon Brightin Star 10mm F5.6 Fisheye Lens for Canon RF Review

The Canon Brightin Star 10mm Fisheye is a weird, fun, and incredibly niche tool for $66. It's not for serious work, but as a creative sidekick, it's an absolute blast.

Focal Length 10mm
Max Aperture f/5.6
Mount Canon RF
Stabilization Yes
Weather Sealed No
Weight 269 g
Lens Type Fisheye
Canon Brightin Star 10mm F5.6 Fisheye Lens for Canon RF lens
55.1 Puntuación global

Overview

Okay, let's get this out of the way: this is not a lens for everyday shooting. The Canon Brightin Star 10mm F5.6 Fisheye is a weird, fun, and incredibly niche tool. The one thing you need to know is that it sees the world in a 172-degree bubble, which is absolutely bonkers. It's a fixed-focus, ultra-wide fisheye that you just point and shoot. For $66, it's less of a serious lens and more of a creative toy you can literally fit in your pocket.

Performance

What surprised me was how good it is at close-up 'macro' work, landing in the 99th percentile. For a lens that doesn't even focus, that's wild. You can get right up on tiny subjects and the whole scene just warps around them in a cool way. The built-in stabilization is also a nice touch for a lens this cheap, helping keep those handheld shots sharp. Just don't expect great optical quality or a fast aperture—it's soft in the corners and the f/5.6 max aperture means you need good light.

Performance Percentiles

AF 46.3
Bokeh 16.5
Build 84.7
Macro 99.5
Optical 35.7
Aperture 16.2
Versatility 37.5
Social Proof 80.4
Stabilization 87.7

Pros & Cons

Pros

  • Insanely wide 172-degree field of view for crazy creative shots. 100th
  • Pocket-sized, lightweight, and surprisingly well-built for the price. 88th
  • No focusing needed—just point and shoot, which is perfect for fast, fun street or travel snaps. 85th
  • Weirdly excellent for creative close-up photography, despite not being a macro lens. 80th

Cons

  • The f/5.6 aperture is slow. You'll need bright daylight or a tripod indoors. 16th
  • Optical quality is just okay. Expect soft edges and heavy distortion (it's a fisheye, after all). 17th
  • Utterly useless for portraits. The 20th percentile score is generous.
  • Zero autofocus and no weather sealing, so it's a fair-weather, manual-only toy.

Specifications

Full Specifications

Optics

Type Fisheye
Focal Length Min 10
Focal Length Max 10

Aperture

Max Aperture f/5.6

Build

Mount Canon RF
Weight 0.3 kg / 0.6 lbs

AF & Stabilization

Stabilization Yes

Focus

Min Focus Distance 10

Value & Pricing

For $66, it's a steal if you want to experiment. You're not buying optical perfection, you're buying a unique perspective. It's absolutely worth the price of admission for the fun factor alone.

Price History

0 US$ 500 US$ 1000 US$ 1500 US$ 18 feb29 mar 1293 US$

vs Competition

Don't compare this to normal lenses like the Viltrox 35mm f/1.7. That's a sharp, fast, versatile prime for real photography. This fisheye is its own thing. A better comparison is the cost of a coffee and a pastry versus a proper meal. If you want a serious, all-around lens, spend more and get something else. If you already have a kit and want to play with extreme wide-angle and distortion for less than the price of a fancy filter, this is your only real option.

Verdict

Buy this lens if you're bored, creative, and have $66 to spare on a photographic experiment. It's a blast to use for a day out, travel oddities, or abstract close-ups. Do not buy this as your only or primary lens. It's a sidekick, not a hero. For the price, it delivers exactly the weird, fun experience it promises.