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Olympus OM-D E-M10 Mark III

Manufacturer: Olympus

Lens configurations: 14-42 + 40-150 Body

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4.2
41 reviews
1
2%
2
0%
3
15%
4
27%
5
32%
very.co.uk
★★★★
4 years ago
Ruined birthday

Bought this for my wife's birthday. Booked a day out to a nature reserve. The camera just clicked. Black screen and just kept clicking. Feels very cheap compared to the omd 5 mark ii. Returned to very. Will give this one a miss as too unreliable out the box. Totally ruined birthday.

PC Magazine
★★★
★★
6 years ago
Olympus OM-D E-M10 Mark III

The Olympus OM-D E-M10 Mark III doesn't have a lot of head-turning new features-the addition of 4K video is the biggest upgrade. Other changes-improved ergonomics, faster processing and focus, and better results when shooting in automatic mode-are smaller, but they are there.

Compact, solid design; Built-in EVF and flash; Tilting touch LCD; 8.8fps burst shooting; In-body stabilization; Raw and JPG capture; In-camera art filters; Wi-Fi

16MP sensor seems dated; Tracking focus slows speed to 4fps; 4K video not easily accessible; No Bluetooth or NFC

Neocamera
★★★
★★
6 years ago
Olympus OM-D E-M10 Mark III

The Olympus OM-D E-M10 Mark III is the newest base OM-D, meaning it is part of the high-end series of Olympus mirrorless cameras and slots itself as the most basic offering in the series.

Very low image noise; Excellent retention of details; Reliable metering; Good Automatic White-Balance; Excellent built-in 5-axis stabilization; Virtually no shutter-lag; Fast contrast-detect AF; Fast shot-to-shot speed; Very responsive; Solid build quality

Some color inaccuracy; Dynamic-range below other mirrorless; Occasional focus miss; Not always Exposure-Priority; Limited EVF and LCD contrast and view-angle; Restricted features; Uncomfortable eyelets; Short battery-life

Digitaltrends
★★★
★★
8 years ago
Olympus OM-D E-M10 Mark III Review

The E-M10 Mark III offers casual shooters a modern camera with a classic design.

Decent 16MP images; Five-axis internal stabilization; Compact; lightweight; Built-in EVF

Same sensor as E-M10 Mark II; Autofocus isn't great for moving subjects; Image quality lags behind APS-C peers

QVC
★★★
★★
5 years ago
Photography only camera

The Olympus OM-D E-M10 Mark iii is a decent camera but if your looking to do video in 4K do not buy this camera. There is no manual mode for 4K video all you have is an auto preset.

PC Magazine
★★★
★★
6 years ago
Olympus OM-D E-M10 Mark III Review

As the entry-level model in the OM-D series, the Olympus OM-D E-M10 Mark III ($649.99, body only) is a mirrorless camera that has to serve several audiences, one of which are those who don't know an f-stop from a truck stop. Olympus has refined the interface to make the newest E-M10 easier to use, and offers some improvements for advanced amateurs, enthusiasts, and even pros looking for a lightweight, inexpensive camera. It does an acceptable job serving multiple audiences, but its sensor is dated and its focus system lags behind competing models. You're better off with the Sony a6000, which delivers higher-resolution images with less noise, and sports an autofocus system that runs circles around the Mark III. Design The Mark III ($649.00 at Amazon) looks a lot like the Mark II, with the same retro-chic finish. But there are some changes to the body, notably a deeper handgrip, larger control dials, and larger point type labeling buttons and dials. It isn't that far off in size (3....

The mirrorless Olympus OM-D E-M10 Mark III camera doesn't offer a lot of tech upgrades, instead focusing on an easier photography experience.

Compact, solid design; Built-in EVF and flash; Tilting touch LCD; 8.8fps burst shooting; In-body stabilization; Raw and JPG capture; In-camera art filters; Wi-Fi

16MP sensor seems dated; Tracking focus slows speed to 4fps; 4K video not easily accessible; No Bluetooth or NFC

Tom's Guide
★★★★
9 years ago
Olympus OM-D E-M10 Mirrorless Camera Review

The Olympus OM-D E-M10 offers a lot of compelling features, especially considering the $699 (body only) price. It has a bright and clear tilting touch screen, effective image stabilization, and plenty of shooting modes and controls.

Small compact design handles well; Detailed images with true-to-life color; Built-in Wi-Fi and powerful apps work well with smartphones; Impressive 8-shot-per-second burst shooting

Sluggish autofocus; especially in low light; Aggressive noise reduction; No external microphone input; Some setting adjustments require multiple steps

CNET
★★★★
10 years ago
Olympus OM-D E-M10

The E-M10 is a solid Micro Four Thirds camera that sits at the bottom of Olympus' higher end OM-D line; the line includes more advanced features, like an electronic viewfinder and tilting display, than the more compact PEN cameras.

The Olympus OM-D E-M10's design and interface works well for both beginning and advanced photographers; it has a well-rounded feature set; and it's fast enough for general-purpose kids-and-pets photography

It produces good-but-not-great photos and videos

DP Review
★★★★
6 years ago

The OM-D E-M10 III isn't a big update in terms of specs, but Olympus has made some pretty significant attempts to make it easier to make full use of its capabilities. We liked its predecessor, and we think the updates to the interface, the addition of 4K and the improved AF Tracking all add...

Increasingly keen beginner photographers

Sports shooters or anyone demanding dependable autofocus

Trusted Reviews
★★★★
6 years ago
Olympus OM-D E-M10 Mark III

The Olympus OM-D E-M10 Mark III is a mirrorless camera with interchangeable lens, based on the Micro Four Thirds standard. It's designed for budding photographers who want to take a step up from their smartphone camera.

Attractive retro design; Compact body; Excellent JPEG image quality with lovely colour rendition; Superb in-body image stabilisation works with every lens; Fast; accurate autofocus with static subjects

Over-simplified in-camera raw conversion; Less reliable autofocus with moving subjects; Sensor dated compared to APS-C competitors

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