Value & Verdict

Fujifilm X-S1 review – Value

Google Preferred Source Badge

There’s no denying, this isn’t a cheap camera. The £700 asking price is more closely aligned with DSLR cameras, though, at the same time, there’s not a superzoom on the market with a feature set as advanced as this. It’ll prove good value for money to many, though is pricier than the longer-zoom FinePix HS30 model that’s also due out this year. More shrewdly priced than may at first meet the eye.

Fujifilm X-S1 review – Verdict

The X-S1 is an impressive superzoom, though it’s not quite the perfect machine. It’s a recommended piece of kit as there’s nothing else like it out there, and it gives the superzoom market the kick it needs. But then at £700 it is expensive, the overall autofocus performance won’t rival a similar-price DSLR, and the sensor can fall into difficulties when confronted with direct light sources that can generate hard-edged, circular highlights.

Expense taken in context, however, and there’s nothing else out there that can compare to the X-S1. A Panasonic Lumix GX1 and 100-300mm lens is closer to £900 and that’s without the EVF. Long-lenses on DSLR brands will be more expensive still. So Fujifilm’s been savvier here than it may at first seem.

Google Preferred Source Badge

There are plenty of positives to be had too: the X-S1 has a solid build, produces better low-noise images than any other superzoom, has a better viewfinder than any other superzoom (and, indeed, one that’s on par with many Compact System Cameras), a decent image stabilisation system, and a layout that handles a lot like a DSLR. That’s a big list of pros to outweigh the cons.

Score

Score in detail

  • Features 95
  • Image Quality 90
  • Design 90
  • Performance 85
  • Value 85