Our coverage so far is based on a camera running non-final firmware, so is focused on the handling and features, rather than the camera's performance. The Fujifilm GFX 100 is the 100 megapixel medium format camera the company had previously promised.
It's a dual-grip mirrorless camera that uses the GF lens mount. The addition of on-sensor phase detection for faster focus and in-body image stabilization significantly expands the range of photography it can apply itself to.
This combination of high resolution, image stabilization and on-sensor phase detection looks to not only drive home its large-sensor advantage over full-frame but also expand the types of photography to which medium format can be easily applied: making it potentially the most flexible bigger-than-full-frame camera ever.
102MP BSI CMOS 44 x 33mm sensor
On-sensor Phase Detection
5-axis Image Stabilization
Continuous shooting at up to 5 fps
4K video with 4:2:2 10-bit HDMI output
5. 76M dot removable OLED viewfinder
16 or 14-bit Raw capture
The Fujifilm GFX 100 will be available from the end of June with a recommended price of $10,000, including the viewfinder.
What's new and how it compares
The camera's 102 megapixels are what attracts the attention, but the GFX 100 brings a lot more than that.
Click to see what's new
Body and Handling
The GFX 100 uses a twin-grip design, and no dedicated dials which radically changes the way the camera handles.
The duplication of control isn't always successful
Operations and Controls
The GFX 100 brings the well-polished interface from the Fujifilm X-T3 but adds an even greater degree of customization.
Click to read more
Body and Handling
We've been shooting the GFX 100 in a range of circumstances, to see how adaptable it is.
Click to see our sample galleries
2019-6-6 16:00