CNET has reviewed the $70 Camp Snap, a digital pocket camera designed to mimic retro film cameras. The device offers a screen-free experience with basic features but falls short in image quality and usability compared to rivals like the Flashback. Reviewers note its appealing design and color options despite limitations.
The Camp Snap camera, priced at $70, targets the digicam trend popular among younger users with its retro-styled film camera design. CNET's review highlights its V105 version, which includes custom filter installation and a redesigned flash toggle that also serves as the power switch, reducing accidental shots compared to earlier models using the shutter button. A removable microSD card is accessible via a screw-secured door on the bottom, though Camp Snap recommends USB connection over the cumbersome card removal. Settings are minimal, limited to date metadata adjustment via three buttons, with no exposure controls or modes, aiming to replicate disposable film cameras. Filters, such as the preinstalled Camp Classic or Vintage, require computer connection to swap using .flt files from the website; users can design custom ones but cannot adjust on the go, unlike the Flashback. Lacking Bluetooth or Wi-Fi contributes to its low cost but adds hassle for image access. At 97 grams, it feels cheaply made with an unsatisfying shutter, electronic sound, and no film-advance mechanism. A small monochromatic LCD shows picture count, paired with an optical viewfinder. Image quality is mediocre: noisy, oversharpened, with overly warm colors, blown-out highlights, resembling budget 2000s cameras—better than the Kodak Charmera but limiting filter effectiveness. The review praises physical design and color variety amid complaints of manufactured scarcity on the site. For more, the $120 CS-Pro offers 16-megapixel resolution, on-the-fly filter switching, and Xenon flash, though still without wireless connectivity.