
I come back with Fujifilm just because of this X70. Cannot expect APS-C sensor in a smaller camera. I can hang it around my neck or put it into my trousers' pocket, very convenient. After using it for a while, it's my camera of choice for daily walk-a-round. I very like X70 for its size, APS-C sensor, focal length, and ego. Let's take a look at its specs against the X70: Of these cameras, the closest competitor is definitely the Ricoh GR II.

The fixed-lens 28mm camera segment already has quite a few current and defunct members, including the Nikon Coolpix A, Ricoh GR II, Sigma DP1Q and Leica Q. Digital 35mm and 50mm teleconverter with upscaling to full-resolution.Both mechanical (leaf) and electronic shutter.Abundant physical controls, including shutter speed, aperture and exposure compensation.
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77-point hybrid autofocus system (49 PDAF+CDAF points, plus 28 CDAF).Let's see what else the X70 brings to the market: Fujifilm X70 Features: It also represents a completely different approach to this camera's closest competitor, the venerable Ricoh GR (II) *. It's a setup that any vintage camera user can appreciate, but one that still makes sense in the digital age. What the X70 does share with the X100 lineup is a metal chassis adorned with dials upon dials, putting camera settings exactly where you left them every time.

It shares many design elements and some specifications with Fujifilm's popular X100-series, but omits their hybrid optical/electronic viewfinder - or indeed any kind of built-in viewfinder at all. Instead, the X70's user interface employs a Fujifilm first: a touchscreen. The Fujifilm X70 is fixed-lens APS-C compact camera with a 16.3MP X-Trans sensor and a 18.5mm (28mm field of view equivalent) F2.8 Fujinon lens.
