Skip to content

What people is missing on the Sony A7V: “you haven’t understood anything!”

Share

Translated title of the video: “you haven’t understood anything”

Following the Sony A7V launch, two camps quickly emerged: one claiming Sony played it too conservatively, and the other praising it as an unexpectedly powerful workhorse.

As you know, I live in Italy and closely follow the Italian YouTubers from Crope. They released a sharp, grounded, and rather aggressive analysis of the A7V launch, which I’ve summarized here using AI translation tools:

Main Argument: Sony Became a Victim of Its Own Success

For years Sony has:

Result:

  • Users expect huge breakthroughs every single time.
  • When Sony releases a conservative but refined update, people feel disappointed.

But the hosts argue:

👉 The Sony A7V is simply an improved Sony A7IV — a refinement of an already excellent camera.

The Real Problem: Online Sensationalism

They strongly criticize:

  • TikTok/Instagram creators with little experience creating sensationalistic takes.
  • Viewers who chase spec-sheet excitement instead of real-world features.
  • The “hype culture” demanding extreme features (e.g., 8K, open gate, RAW internal) even when most will never use them.

Why Many Opinions Online Are Misguided

Most criticisms focus only on:

  • No open-gate
  • 4K120 with crop
  • No 6K

BUT:

  • The Sony A7V is primarily a PHOTO CAMERA, not a cinema camera.
  • Many critics don’t actually work professionally and don’t understand how a camera is used on real jobs.

Real Improvements (Often Ignored Online)

Photographic Upgrades

  • Still 33 MP, but partially-stacked sensor → faster readout.
  • 30 fps burst (blackout-free EVF).
  • Pre-capture (up to 1 second of images before pressing the shutter). Massive benefit for weddings, sports, events.

Significantly Better Battery Life

  • Up to +30% more shots.
  • A very practical upgrade for real photographers.

Huge AWB Improvement

  • New database-assisted Auto White Balance, with machine-learning scene referencing.
  • Much more consistent colors in mixed or difficult lighting.

D. AI-based Resolution Enhancement

Via Sony’s Imaging Edge:

  • Take a RAW file → upscale to a higher-resolution RAW (not just a JPEG).
  • Very helpful for large prints.

These features matter far more than “6K” for most working photographers.

Why Sony Didn’t Add 6K/Open-Gate

  • Sony must protect the Cinema Line (Sony FX3, Sony FX30, future Sony FX3 Mark II).
  • If the Sony A7V had full cine features, it would cannibalize the FX-line.
  • The Sony A7V is intentionally designed as: 👉 A photo-first hybrid, not a cinema camera.

Comparison With Competitors

Some say the Canon R6 III or Nikon Z6 III are “more advanced”.

The hosts respond:

  • Those cameras often overheat or have limitations in real use.
  • Many features are marketing-driven, not practical.
  • The Sony A7V is far more stable, predictable, and reliable — the qualities that matter to professionals.

Pricing

  • €3000 is seen as reasonable given inflation and category positioning.
  • Sony A7IV remains in the lineup at a lower price → still a top recommendation.

Who Should Buy the A7V?

BUY IT IF:

  • You are a wedding/event photographer → pre-capture is game-changing.
  • You need a fast, reliable second body for Sony A1 / Sony A9III / Sony A7R V.
  • You want the newest Sony ergonomics, AF, battery, AWB improvement.

DON’T BUY IT IF:

  • You’re a beginner or hobbyist → the Sony A7IV is still the best value.
  • You focus mainly on video → buy Sony FX3 / Sony FX30 / Sony FX3 Mark II (coming).
  • You expected a “revolutionary upgrade” → this is evolutionary.

Message to Users

  • Stop obsessing over specs you don’t use (8K, 6K, open gate).
  • Invest more in lenses, lighting, technique, not just bodies.
  • Stop asking YouTubers which camera to buy — make your own informed decision.
  • Consume content critically and understand the creator’s perspective and goals.

Closing Thoughts

  • The Sony A7V isn’t the most exciting release, but it is solid, refined, professional.
  • Sony shifted focus back to photography, which is positive.
  • Most frustrations online come from unrealistic expectations, not from the product itself.
Share
Back To Top