It does give me strong futuristic spacesuit vibes and makes the camera look much more modern. The GFX 100 II is a slick-looking camera, but also it feels good in the hand, the new BISHAMON-TEX material on the camera is nice to hold and is a little more grippy than the traditional faux-leather finish, although not revolutionary. Personally, I think the optional grip is the right move, I don’t love a vertical grip, so having it as an optional extra, and still being able to enjoy the full force of Fujifilm’s most powerful medium format camera without the extra bulk is very welcome.įujifilm is one of my favorite manufacturers when it comes to the build quality and styling of its cameras, and the GFX 100 II continues in that tradition. The camera is obviously smaller and lighter than the GFX 100 as it no longer has the grip built in, although, with the grip attached, it actually becomes the heavier option. The styling of the GFX 100 II follows that of Fujifilm’s compact medium format cameras like the GFX 100S, and does away with the built-in vertical grip from the original GFX 100. The GFX 100 II uses Fujifilm's NP-W235 battery, providing around 540 frames (20% better than the GFX 100) or 60 minutes of 4K30p recording on a single charge. The GFX 100 II features a detachable 9.44m-dot viewer as well as a three-way tilting 3.0-in screen, and a 2.09-in screen up top. (Image credit: Gareth Bevan / Digital Camera World) The GFX 100 II comes with a detachable EVF and an optional grip.
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