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GFX100RF or X-T5 for user experience (compared to GFX 100s)

  
 
drimer
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p.1 #1 · GFX100RF or X-T5 for user experience (compared to GFX 100s)


Hoping to get some input and figure out what direction might make sense. Sold my 50R to pay for the 100S and still miss using it. Felt very tactile and intuitive. Don’t really feel like the 100s has “soul” and have been fairly disappointed with its white balance performance (always too green and often too cool). But of course it takes great images. Primary cameras are Canon R5 and R3. Most of this gear feels very utilitarian and I miss the classic styling/tactile experience of using some of the other Fujis.

I enjoyed my X100F that I sold to move to the 50R. I did not gel with the X100VI that I tried for a bit. Technically an excellent camera, but images felt “mushy” and detail just seemed absent at a pixel level relative to most other cameras I’ve used (including the X100F). Maybe I had a dud. I swapped that for a Sony Rx1Rii, and love the output of the 35mm f/2 and 42mp sensor but don’t love the ergonomics. Occasionally use it for people photos but enjoy it for hikes, travel, good light at random events, etc.

For reasonably small compact use, I have the Canon Powershot V1. Might pick up a Ricoh or something truly pocketable eventually, but that’s not about the shooting experience exactly. Having handled a Q3 in store briefly I’m not super interested in the size/weight/density of the Leica Q series. I prefer more of a grip.

Looking at three options. For around $2000, I could just rebuy a 50R or get a XT4 or XT5 kit with a pancake and either the 75mm 1.2 or the 23mm 1.4. For anyone who has used both the X100vi and the X-T5, is the 40MP sensor capable of more than I experienced on the X100? (or is the X-T4 and 26mp sensor the way to go?) I know the format’s limitations, but I got some really ugly almost worm-like noise on some of my compressed X100VI RAWs and I’m not eager to repeat that experience. I’d keep the RX1R here and use it when it’s rendering made it worth the hassle.

The other option I’m thinking about is selling the Rx1R and picking up a GFX100RF instead. I know there’s a 1,700 post thread on it, but I don’t want to go through that all. Basically, I’m wondering whether it’s a fun camera to use in practice. Might be worth renting one but just wanted to hear others’ experiences first. Not thrilled to need to add a filter for weather sealing, but maybe that doesn’t bulk up the camera too much in practice.

My goal is to have a camera that’s enjoyable to use, that’s weather sealed, and is reasonably compact for carrying around and throwing in a bag as a backup/second body beside a primary system (e.g. R5 with 70-200 or 100S with 110mm). Good color output as loaded to Lightroom is a strong preference. I print every now and again but value color above most else.

A true compact that takes good portraits would be lovely, but I’m not sure that really exists (Rx1 is about as close as we get). I’m between getting a small X-kit or a GFX100RF for a pleasant shooting experience and a kit that can go with me anywhere without being 5lbs on my shoulder. Interested to hear your thoughts!



May 09, 2026 at 07:42 AM
RWNPhoto
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p.1 #2 · GFX100RF or X-T5 for user experience (compared to GFX 100s)


My thinking, in your historical story, is similar to stories long ago in forums about pixels and arguments for higher pixel counts. Too tiny of spaces between them.

The 50R, from what you seem to say, you really liked. Maybe more for the ergonomics and handling, than the images, but that is for you to decide. You felt similar feelings with your X100F...

Both had a bout the same pixel pitch or whatever they call it. You felt the X100VI felt mushy. Mushy in images? If so, a lot of people tried the VI and stuck with their V, or Older X100's, because they didn't like the "look" of the VI's 40mp sensor.

Do you feel the 100s has images that are "mushy" or otherwise, not as "pleasing" as you 50R ones? If so, that is probably your answer. You, or your eyes, don't like larger pixel counts on same size sensors. You're good with 24mp on APS-C and good with 50mp on Fuji size MF sensor. And all of that is FINE. A lot of people are like that. Of course, a lot of people think they are crazy. But I think people who buy a car that costs over $100K is crazy. So...

The 50R is old, gets some bad press now, be great if Fuji updated it, but they won't. And I'm not sure that the 100RF would make you totally happy, and it isn't a portrait camera (portrait as human portraits), the X-T5 might not make you happy either.

Stuff to think about. Others can counter argue now.

Edited on May 09, 2026 at 01:54 PM · View previous versions



May 09, 2026 at 10:05 AM
Erich6_
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p.1 #3 · GFX100RF or X-T5 for user experience (compared to GFX 100s)


Since you liked the 50R so much, you’ll probably like the GFX100RF. Similar style but smaller, so the ergonomics will be different. You’ll get extremely high resolution on the wide end but you won’t get a portrait machine. If portraits are important, I think you’ll be better off with an X-T5 and the lenses you are considering. I find the 40MP sensor is very good.


May 09, 2026 at 10:08 AM
kenbennett
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p.1 #4 · GFX100RF or X-T5 for user experience (compared to GFX 100s)


I have a pair of X-T5 bodies, the GFX100s, and an X-H2s. Last year I tried and sold an X100vi. Not sure how to answer all the questions, but I can give some thoughts.

The 40mp files from the X-T5 and X100vi are very comparable. I like this sensor and get results from it that make me happy, including 16x24 inch prints that look fabulous. The X-T5 is roughly the same size as the X100vi, if you include a pancake lens. I like the original 18 f/2.

I love the GFX100s, it might be my favorite Fuji camera ever, and I include the X Pro 2 bodies that I loved for years in that statement. I love shooting 65:24 panoramic images with this system, along with 4:3 environmental portraits. I keep it small with the 50mm pancake, the 80mm f/1.7 for portraits, and the 35-70 kit lens. (If I need a broad array of lenses I just use the X-T5 system.) I have tested the X-T5 against the GFX-100s, and of course the GFX is obviously "better" but the results were a lot closer than I expected.

I handled a GFX100RF last summer at a conference and honestly did not like how it felt in the hand. Just not comfortable for me. YMMV. The lens seemed excellent, and I do love that 28mm-equivalent on a 4:3 camera (along with the 65:24 of course.)

I use the X-H2s for birds with the Fuji 500mm. The 26mp files are also very good, and I don't see a lot of difference from the 40mp, other than the minor resolution bump.



May 09, 2026 at 02:17 PM
drimer
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p.1 #5 · GFX100RF or X-T5 for user experience (compared to GFX 100s)




RWNPhoto wrote:
My thinking, in your historical story, is similar to stories long ago in forums about pixels and arguments for higher pixel counts. Too tiny of spaces between them.

The 50R, from what you seem to say, you really liked. Maybe more for the ergonomics and handling, than the images, but that is for you to decide. You felt similar feelings with your X100F...

Both had a bout the same pixel pitch or whatever they call it. You felt the X100VI felt mushy. Mushy in images? If so, a lot of people tried the VI and stuck with their V, or Older X100's,
...Show more

Thanks for weighing in! I like the images from the 100s, I just don’t always love using it. Not as comfortable/natural in the hand for me personally. Detail is great to my eyes. But I preferred the starting colors off the 50R. Nothing is a perfect setup, everything has tradeoffs. Just trying to better understand the options!



May 09, 2026 at 03:34 PM
tuomkok
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p.1 #6 · GFX100RF or X-T5 for user experience (compared to GFX 100s)


Erich6_ wrote:
Since you liked the 50R so much, you’ll probably like the GFX100RF. Similar style but smaller, so the ergonomics will be different. You’ll get extremely high resolution on the wide end but you won’t get a portrait machine. If portraits are important, I think you’ll be better off with an X-T5 and the lenses you are considering. I find the 40MP sensor is very good.


If one accepts the limitations of GFX100RF there is not much to complain about. I understand it is not for everyone, but I like it as my second camera. Actually it is y most used camera... Yesterday I posted my feelings after 1 year and 20 000 photos. Feel free to comment.

https://www.fredmiranda.com/forum/topic/1895510/85#17034946

I50R seems to be a cult camera because it is ILC and fairly economical to buy. Despite being "rangefinder style" I consider GFX100RF very different from 50R. GFX100RF is compact, fairly fast to use, much more expensive and obviously not ILC. One can use GFX100RF as Ricoh GR style street camera, not possible with 50R.

Regarding Image quality, I like GFX100RF very much. Files are flexible and colors are a little better than in my Sony A7rV. I am not complaining about Sony colors, but GFX100RF seems to produce flles that are both more vibrant and have more pleasing tonality. 100mp resolution is not really needed but it helps a little if one needs to crop. I shoot almost exclusively raw converted in C1.

I have quite limited in experience with other Fuji cameras, but I have used X100 since day one. Currently I have X100V. Maybe it is the 26mp X-Trans sensor but I X100V colors and tonality are my absolute all time favourite. GFX100RF images need a little more tweaking to look the same.



May 10, 2026 at 03:13 AM
serhan_
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p.1 #7 · GFX100RF or X-T5 for user experience (compared to GFX 100s)


First prioritize what you want eg compact vs portraits vs body seal... All of the cameras has compromises... Also you can go to dpreview and download the raw files for your use and check...

If you want 50R, you should get one, but that is a huge camera for me...If you like like X100F, maybe X-Pro 3 might be a better choice with RF style body... Here is a summary of x-trans sensor types & cameras:
https://www.kristoffertrolle.com/2021/battle-of-x-trans-sensors-x-trans-1-vs-x-trans-2-vs-x-trans-3-vs-x-trans-4/

I use freewell 0.75x & 1.5x converters with RX1R III and Sigma 56mm with X-E5... Both are not ergonomic, and need body/thumb grips... Both EVF's are the worst, but they are the smallest & responsive options as I use them for pet portraits indoors...75mm 1.2 lens is huge and I don't use it much... Samyang 75mm 1.8 is an option.. Again X-t4/5 needs a grip with bigger lenses and it is as big as a FF mirrorless... Instead of a XT, I would go for a used/refurbished Canon R8 with Canon 85mm f2...

GFX100RF is a very nice camera, but the joystick is the worst, needs body/thumb grips for my use... It is a limited use camera eg worst for low light as Tuomkok summarized it for you. I am still looking for a tele converter. GR 1.5x converter covers FF, but quality is not that great though it makes the portraits look better. Neewer/Freewell X100VI 1.5x teleconverters are better and cover the FF for portraits on Rx1Riii, but don't cover the landscape shots. You can pick Neewer to try on RX1R ii... I will try to open one and cut the rear cover to make it larger to see if can work with FF landscapes/GFX100RF... 99% of the time, I would go for a RX1R III for size and responsiveness against GFX...



If you want a sealed small compact, Canon G1X III is an apsc P&S... Other option is used OM-1 and sealed m43 lenses... OM1 has a fast sensor, ibis, live nd, and hand-held multi stacking which gives a couple stops of additional iso gain...I switched from Fuji XT to OM-1 II as my daily dog walk camera with small Pana 14-140mm lens...Fuji X-T5 and 18-135mm combo was getting mushy fall details, old zoom lenses are not matching to high MP sensor...

drimer wrote:
Hoping to get some input and figure out what direction might make sense. Sold my 50R to pay for the 100S and still miss using it. Felt very tactile and intuitive. Don’t really feel like the 100s has “soul” and have been fairly disappointed with its white balance performance (always too green and often too cool). But of course it takes great images. Primary cameras are Canon R5 and R3. Most of this gear feels very utilitarian and I miss the classic styling/tactile experience of using some of the other Fujis.

I enjoyed my X100F that I sold to move to
...Show more




May 10, 2026 at 10:04 AM
RWNPhoto
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p.1 #8 · GFX100RF or X-T5 for user experience (compared to GFX 100s)


The Sony RX1R III is a very compelling option to the Fuji 100RF... most people don't think so.


May 10, 2026 at 11:38 AM
gdanmitchell
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p.1 #9 · GFX100RF or X-T5 for user experience (compared to GFX 100s)


I can make excellent (salable) 20” x 30” print using my XT5. Do your requirements exceed that? If not, there is little reason to give up the full controls, the interface, and the small size of that camera for the larger format.

Indeed, if you work carefully and then zoom way in on images on your computer screen the larger format can record a bit more detail… that you are unlikely to see in normal reproductions, even at relatively large sizes.

And you can select the lenses that best match your needs and preferences. Put one of the Fuji pancakes on it and the package is very small, or switch to any other lens that suits you needs.



May 11, 2026 at 01:24 AM
JustAHouseCat
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p.1 #10 · GFX100RF or X-T5 for user experience (compared to GFX 100s)


gdanmitchell wrote:
I can make excellent (salable) 20” x 30” print using my XT5. Do your requirements exceed that? If not, there is little reason to give up the full controls, the interface, and the small size of that camera for the larger format.

Indeed, if you work carefully and then zoom way in on images on your computer screen the larger format can record a bit more detail… that you are unlikely to see in normal reproductions, even at relatively large sizes.

And you can select the lenses that best match your needs and preferences. Put one of the Fuji pancakes on it
...Show more

The biggest reason most people have for higher than 40MP is better cropping and less false colors/moire. The real question is how much do you actually use IBIS on a 28mm lens. It's more useful on telephotos but with with wider angles I essentially only use it for night time suburban landscapes. I don't really miss it on a camera like this since it could never replace an ILC and instead is meant for traveling/street/documentary work.

I do wish the lens was f/2.8 and a bit bigger even if this camera is mostly made for shooting slower apertures.



May 11, 2026 at 12:16 PM
 


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SGinNorcal
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p.1 #11 · GFX100RF or X-T5 for user experience (compared to GFX 100s)


I had the Gfx50S before moving to the 100S, I use C1 and wasn't able to see any differences in color rendering between the 50 and 100 with the same lens in most cases. On certain shots, I occasionally thought the bigger pixels looked a little smoother. But not enough to outweigh the other advantages of the 100S.
I use an X-T5 for when I need a smaller camera and it does have quicker AF. On the X system, if you experienced "mushy" images, I would think that is more about lens selection than anything. But I don't use LR so maybe you have a setup issues there. If you prefer the highest level of detail, the latest lenses give you a little more along with better AF performance.



May 11, 2026 at 12:42 PM
gdanmitchell
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p.1 #12 · GFX100RF or X-T5 for user experience (compared to GFX 100s)


JustAHouseCat wrote:
The biggest reason most people have for higher than 40MP is better cropping and less false colors/moire. The real question is how much do you actually use IBIS on a 28mm lens. It's more useful on telephotos but with with wider angles I essentially only use it for night time suburban landscapes. I don't really miss it on a camera like this since it could never replace an ILC and instead is meant for traveling/street/documentary work.

I do wish the lens was f/2.8 and a bit bigger even if this camera is mostly made for shooting slower apertures.


I do half of my photography on Fujifilm x-trans, and I don’t see problems with “false colors/moire.”

I definitely use IBIS on wide lenses, especially for interiors and for night street photography. It is one of those features with no real downside and plenty of real-world upsides.

It still just seems bizarre to me that people would spend twice the price or more to carry a larger camera with limited maximum aperture and a wide angle lens that must be cropped for a whole lot of shots… when they could have an excellent smaller, lighter camera with exactly the lens(es) they need that will produce quality that, in some cases, exceeds the cropped images they’ll end up with on the larger fixed-lens, non-IBIS camera.



May 11, 2026 at 04:33 PM
chez
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p.1 #13 · GFX100RF or X-T5 for user experience (compared to GFX 100s)


gdanmitchell wrote:
I do half of my photography on Fujifilm x-trans, and I don’t see problems with “false colors/moire.”

I definitely use IBIS on wide lenses, especially for interiors and for night street photography. It is one of those features with no real downside and plenty of real-world upsides.

It still just seems bizarre to me that people would spend twice the price or more to carry a larger camera with limited maximum aperture and a wide angle lens that must be cropped for a whole lot of shots… when they could have an excellent smaller, lighter camera with exactly the
...Show more

One word…enjoyment.



May 11, 2026 at 05:44 PM
Makten
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p.1 #14 · GFX100RF or X-T5 for user experience (compared to GFX 100s)


Or you just use the native wide angle the most, but sometimes you can allow yourself to crop because of the massive resolution.

The RF is not for me because of too wide lens, but it's quite compelling in every other respect.



May 12, 2026 at 01:37 AM
Lukacs
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p.1 #15 · GFX100RF or X-T5 for user experience (compared to GFX 100s)


-Where do yo find X100VI mushy at pixel level? If at F4 on center than the problem may the too high pixel density of the sensor, at f2-2.8 close to edges the reason is the lens performance. If you are ok with f4 center sharpness than an X-T5 is a possible ILCE alternative, but only with top tier primes, like 18 f1.4 or 33 f1.4. Or you can just resize to 24MP if you want better pixel level sharpness.

-GFX100RF is an outstanding camera if that 35mm (eqv 28mm) focal length with limited background separation ability is fine with you. Significant better than 50R with one f4 prime lens.

-50R seems an obvious choice if you liked that camera, and don't intend to lock yourself with one focal length forever, or prefer tighter FOV or more separation, or like some adapted lenses.

Since you have Canon as main camera and want a Fuji as a recreation tool, as long as you can work with 28mm, GFX100RF hardly disappoints you if you can afford it.




May 12, 2026 at 07:37 AM
JustAHouseCat
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p.1 #16 · GFX100RF or X-T5 for user experience (compared to GFX 100s)


gdanmitchell wrote:
I do half of my photography on Fujifilm x-trans, and I don’t see problems with “false colors/moire.”

I definitely use IBIS on wide lenses, especially for interiors and for night street photography. It is one of those features with no real downside and plenty of real-world upsides.

It still just seems bizarre to me that people would spend twice the price or more to carry a larger camera with limited maximum aperture and a wide angle lens that must be cropped for a whole lot of shots… when they could have an excellent smaller, lighter camera with exactly the
...Show more

x-trans still experiences false colors and moire it's just better at them at the cost of software not being optimized for and under some circumstances noise looking weird and worm like.

The reason is resolving power and weight. IBIS has a downside in making cameras larger and hotter. I wouldn't hate if it was in the GFX100RF but truthfully I don't need it for a camera like that. It would only ruin the camera by making it bigger for something most people barely use. You can handhold the thing down to like 1/30th pretty easily and if your careful 1/15th. I don't need to go lower on that. I also don't want a little camera and a bag of lenses. Changing lenses in the field is a vibe kill and it just means you are spending less on a camera and more on buying a collection of lenses. I have done that for nikon but truthfully I do 90% of my shooting at either 28mm or 35mm. 100mp in a compact package is better for that then something 40mp with a bag full of lenses.



May 12, 2026 at 09:04 AM
serhan_
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p.1 #17 · GFX100RF or X-T5 for user experience (compared to GFX 100s)


I read your GFX one year experience post, good overview and very nice photos:
https://www.dpreview.com/forums/threads/gfx100rf-one-year-experience.4835986/

Raw resolution comparison of high end P&S's as a reference:
GFX100RF: https://www.optyczne.pl/520.4-Test_aparatu-Fujifilm_GFX100RF_Optyka.html
Q3: https://www.optyczne.pl/491.4-Test_aparatu-Leica_Q3_Optyka.html
RX1RIII: https://www.optyczne.pl/519.4-Test_aparatu-Sony_DSC-RX1R_III_Optyka.html
GR IV: https://www.optyczne.pl/524.4-Test_aparatu-Ricoh_GR_IV_Optyka.html
X100VI: https://www.optyczne.pl/503.4-Test_aparatu-Fujifilm_X100VI_Optyka.html

Lukacs wrote:
-Where do yo find X100VI mushy at pixel level? If at F4 on center than the problem may the too high pixel density of the sensor, at f2-2.8 close to edges the reason is the lens performance. If you are ok with f4 center sharpness than an X-T5 is a possible ILCE alternative, but only with top tier primes, like 18 f1.4 or 33 f1.4. Or you can just resize to 24MP if you want better pixel level sharpness.

-GFX100RF is an outstanding camera if that 35mm (eqv 28mm) focal length with limited background separation ability is fine with you. Significant
...Show more




May 12, 2026 at 09:49 AM
gdanmitchell
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p.1 #18 · GFX100RF or X-T5 for user experience (compared to GFX 100s)


Lukacs wrote:
-Where do yo find X100VI mushy at pixel level? If at F4 on center than the problem may the too high pixel density of the sensor, at f2-2.8 close to edges the reason is the lens performance. If you are ok with f4 center sharpness than an X-T5 is a possible ILCE alternative, but only with top tier primes, like 18 f1.4 or 33 f1.4. Or you can just resize to 24MP if you want better pixel level sharpness.


I once made a 40” wide print of a XT5 shot using the 27mm f2.8 at f5.6 just to see how it would turn out… and it actually looked quite good.

- - -


JustAHouseCat wrote:
x-trans still experiences false colors and moire it's just better at them at the cost of software not being optimized for and under some circumstances noise looking weird and worm like.

The reason is resolving power and weight. IBIS has a downside in making cameras larger and hotter. I wouldn't hate if it was in the GFX100RF but truthfully I don't need it for a camera like that. It would only ruin the camera by making it bigger for something most people barely use. You can handhold the thing down to like 1/30th pretty easily and if your careful 1/15th. I
...Show more

These days IBIS barely adds any bulk or weight to cameras — the mechanism has become quite small. I have never heard of anyone having a real world problem with heart generated by I IS.

“Bag full of lenses” sounds pretty dire, doesn’t it? ;-)

For street and travel I carry three: 14mm f2.8, 27mm f2.8, 50mm f2. Tiny load.

I sense that you REALLY want to own a RF, and that there is some motivated reasoning going on here. ;-)



May 12, 2026 at 04:22 PM
tuomkok
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p.1 #19 · GFX100RF or X-T5 for user experience (compared to GFX 100s)


Anyone saying IBIS is not doable in a small camera should take a good look at Sony A7Cr/2. That body is X100 size despite being full frame ILC - and the IBIS is very good. A7C2 is also a really good video camera without any overheating issues.

Sony seems to do casually things that are considered impossible for Fuji. The much dabated non-IBIS GFX100RF is another example of this. As someone who uses actively both brand, I can confirm that there are other reasons to choose Fuji

Having leaf shutter and relatively hefty body, GFX100RF does not seem to suffer from the lack of IBIS as much as some say. Sure you need a tripod to use long shutter speeds creatively. However, in a typical night city scenario it is usually just fine with 1/30 sec time.

Street life by Tuomo Kokkonen, on Flickr

Sunset over city by Tuomo Kokkonen, on Flickr

Dark city by Tuomo Kokkonen, on Flickr



May 13, 2026 at 01:04 AM
highdesertmesa
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p.1 #20 · GFX100RF or X-T5 for user experience (compared to GFX 100s)



drimer wrote:
Hoping to get some input and figure out what direction might make sense. Sold my 50R to pay for the 100S and still miss using it. Felt very tactile and intuitive. Don’t really feel like the 100s has “soul” and have been fairly disappointed with its white balance performance (always too green and often too cool). But of course it takes great images. Primary cameras are Canon R5 and R3. Most of this gear feels very utilitarian and I miss the classic styling/tactile experience of using some of the other Fujis.

I enjoyed my X100F that I sold to move to
...Show more

Some thoughts:

— Repurchasing the 50R in like new condition will cost you closer to $2,800 right now, which IMO is an overinflated price due to YouTubers rediscovering it in the last year. The 50S is a far better value at around $2,000 for like new and feels much better made, whereas the 50R feels a bit cheap to me (and no ISO dial or 3-way tilt screen).
— Auto white balance on all Fujifilm cameras can be biased any direction you want in the menu. 50R was notorious for being too magenta, so you probably started to think of that as normal. 100S white balance is far more neutral, but you can bump the default white balance to be slightly warmer and more magenta if that suits you.
— If you’re seeing “worms” on XTrans files, it may mean you haven’t updated C1 or LR in some time, you’re over-sharpening your files, you’re zooming in way past 100%, or all of the above. Remember that XTrans is like having a fairly strong AA filter and you may have lower perceived sharpness at 100% compared to a non-AA filter CMOS sensor like the GFX.
— X-T5 with a good lens produces very sharp files.
— Don’t know where you’re coming from about the X100VI files not being sharp compared to your X100F. The F lens was craptastic compared to the V and VI lens.
— It’s hard to put into words just how much smaller the 100RF is compared to any GFX body. It feels like holding an X100.



May 15, 2026 at 07:49 AM
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