The Sony RX100 VI is a handy and incredibly useful camera. If you’re a traveler and don’t want to carry a camera bag full of lenses, flashes, and audio equipment, then it’s a small but powerful alternative. The $1,200 price tag might make you scoff at it, but the performance is well beyond what you can get with your phone.
Our editors hand-pick these products using a variety of criteria: they might be direct competitors targeting the same market segment, or they could be devices that are similar in size, performance, or feature sets.
The RX 100 VI is a fantastic point-and-shoot camera. It carves out a niche by delivering creamy bokeh in stills, solid telephoto performance, and excellent video quality all in a package that's not much bigger than two smartphones stacked together. But it does have drawbacks, namely low-light performance and grip. If you're looking for a travel camera or an everyday shooter that can fit in your pocket, the RX 100 VI is a killer choice. But at $1,200, it doesn't come cheap.
There's no other camera this tiny that offers the sheer quality and versatility of the Sony RX100 VI. Yes, it's very expensive, but this has been designed to be the very best small compact on the market, and taking into account its image quality, its...
The Sony RX100 VI is, without much doubt, the best compact camera on the market. But, boy oh boy do you pay for that accolade. If you're looking for something to be your ultimate companion for that “just in case” shot, you can't go far wrong with the...
There are so many great things about the Sony RX100 VI, but before you go into a dizzying spell of lust where it seems like nothing will become between you and the thing you so much desire, let's talk about its flaws. The lack of mic port is an...
While the Sony DSC-RX100 VI is a very capable bridge camera with powerful features, at $1,200, it's too pricey to recommend to most people. For $400 less, the Panasonic Lumix ZS200 offers about the same image quality and an even a longer optical zoom...
Point-and-shoot cameras are an odd breed in 2018. The best camera you have is probably the one in your pocket: a phone. But that hasn't stopped Sony's RX100 line of compact point-and-shoot cameras from being wildly popular. Galaxy phones, Pixels, and...
The Sony Cyber-shot RX100 VI offers an 8.3x optical zoom lens, in a compact camera that delivers both high-speed shooting, and high image quality. It's compact, perhaps too compact, and costs over £1000, so may not be to everyone's liking, but it's...
Every time Sony updates the RX100 series, it becomes even more unbelievable what can fit into such a small body. Here with the RX100 VI you've really got some fantastic features, but it comes at such a high asking price that you have to really want...
The RX100 VI is a fantastic camera if you're looking to cover a wide variety of subjects and don't want to carry an assortment of lenses.24 FPS capture with AF tracking is nothing to sneeze at, and optics with an effective 24-200 mm focal length...
The RX100 VI is a hugely capable camera. It trades some of its predecessors' low light performance for greater daytime flexibility, though the price tag is steep.Read...
Photo Review received one of the first review units available in Australia, which accounts for the lack of third-party support for converting raw files from the camera. It also means that discounting has yet to become established, although you may be...
Theres no doubt that the Sony RX100 VI is an astounding technological feat. After all, heres a camera with a 24-200mm equivalent zoom, built-in viewfinder, 24 fps shooting at full resolution, and 4K video recording. Yet this is all somehow crammed...
If you look at the spec sheet for the RX100 VI alone, it pretty much wipes the floor with most of its compact-sized rivals. We don't think there's a more advanced or better specified compact camera out there at the moment. The trouble is that accessing...
Sony's latest premium point-and-shoot covers a huge focal range in a compact package, and will surely fit the needs of street photographers looking to be as unobtrusive as possible. During the camera's announcement day, we had some time to walk around...