The resolution hasn’t changed since the original A7, but backside illumination runs the circuity on the back of the sensor, rather than the front, making it more sensitive to light. It all starts with a new backside-illuminated (BSI) 24-megapixel sensor. Sony is known for pouring as much tech into its cameras as it can, and the A7 III is the latest example of this. Even those who could afford much more will likely find all the camera they need in the $2,000 A7 III. We have our usual reservations about Sony’s control layout and menu system, and the camera doesn’t achieve best-in-class status on every single feature, but it would be difficult not to recommend it to virtually any photographer who can afford it. It is the complete package - the real deal, the full enchilada. It offers the dynamic range of the A7R III, the low-light performance of the A7S II, and enough of the speed of the Sony A9 that it serves up all the performance most of us would ever need - and it does it all for well below the cost of those other models. The A7 III flips this notion on its head.
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