Sony Rx100: Mark 6 Cu
For documentary filmmakers on a budget, the RX100 VI became a B-cam that can hide in a pocket and deliver 200mm close-ups without changing lenses. No review of the RX100 VI is honest without acknowledging its fatal flaw: low light.
More importantly, it proved that pocket cameras could not survive by fighting smartphones on their own turf (wide, fast, computational). Instead, they had to retreat to what smartphones physically cannot do: sony rx100 mark 6 cu
The Mark V had a 24-70mm f/1.8-2.8. That means at wide angle, you could shoot in near-darkness. The Mark VI has a 24-200mm f/2.8-4.5. At the telephoto end (200mm), the maximum aperture is f/4.5—more than a full stop slower than the Mark V’s wide-open aperture. For documentary filmmakers on a budget, the RX100
The pop-up electronic viewfinder (EVF) also got a resolution bump. It’s not the OLED of the A7 series, but at 2.36 million dots, it is usable even in bright sunlight—something the rear LCD cannot always manage. When Sony launched the RX100 VI, they marketed it as “the ultimate travel compact.” But travelers were confused. Travel photographers usually want either low-light muscle (for evenings) or wide angles (for architecture). The RX100 VI offered neither of those excellently. Instead, they had to retreat to what smartphones
But if you value possibility over perfection , this camera is a miracle. It is a Swiss Army knife with a 24-200mm lens, 24 fps bursts, and 4K video, all living in a jacket pocket.