*feeds everyone 1 wild blueberry from bluey's berry basket*
bluey has decided to make this post so people can be more familiar with what's available in terms of the best webcams. There's a lot of really bad 1080p and especially 4k webcams, where they market their webcam beforehand as appearing to have DSLR/Mirrorless-like quality because they specifically shoot their video footage trailers for the webcam in a DSLR/Mirrorless, not with the actual webcam. Also, often checking for what the best webcams are on google, you'll often see the Logitech Brio, which is not even remotely close to the best and is long outdated, so here's a list of the webcams that bluey personally suggests for models, which are also currently at the time of this post, the best webcams.
Razer Kiyo Pro Ultra: https://www.razer.com/streaming-cameras/razer-kiyo-pro-ultra/RZ19-04420100-R3U1
Razer Kiyo Pro Ultra Footage: |
Elgato Facecam Pro: https://www.elgato.com/us/en/p/facecam-pro
Elgato Facecam Pro Footage:
OBSBOT Tiny 2: https://www.obsbot.com/store/products/tiny-2 |
Insta360 Link: https://www.insta360.com/product/insta360-link |
OBSBOT Tiny 2+Insta360 Link Footage:
there would've been some couple other honorable mentions that are good, like AVerMedia's PW515 or NexiGo Iris, but not as good as these listed above and they're about pretty close to the same price range, which makes mentioning them pretty much pointless, especially for context of camming. there is a few things bluey will mention about these webcams in regards of who they're most fitting for, to help a little more with decision-making.
Razer Kiyo Pro Ultra is only a recommendation to those that already have a DSLR/Mirrorless camera for recording their videos or if you have a photographer doing such stuff. The reason for this, is because the Kiyo Pro Ultra can only record in 4K at 24 FPS, but if you're looking for a webcam for strictly just stream use and not also for recording anything, the Kiyo Pro Ultra uses a full-frame camera Sony Starvis 2 sensor, which is the biggest sensor on any webcam and this makes it especially useful for people that stream with lots of different RGB/colored lighting, it also has an F1.7 aperture ratio, which doesn't exist in most specialty camera lens until anywhere from around $500 to $3,000+. Another important mention here is, Razer's Synapse app for the Kiyo Pro Ultra, is not compatible with Mac, so this is strictly a webcam choice only for Windows users.
Elgato Facecam Pro, even though bluey has mentioned it here, this is not a beginner friendly webcam. The Facecam Pro's autofocus is quite bad, making it a webcam a little more for Twitch-type streaming where you're just at a fixed distance and never really moving and to make it look very good, you want to color correct it through DaVinci Resolve and spend some time really perfecting how it looks. However, it can capture and record in 4K 60 FPS, which no other webcam can do, its aperture ratio is F2.0 and it has a full-frame Sony Starvis sensor (smaller than Sony Starvis 2), but with the right set-up and for those that are familiar with DaVinci Resolve and can find a use for how you stream that's more fitting with a manual focus and not auto focus, this is a webcam that can be considered, but otherwise, bluey does not suggest this webcam personally, because of the amount of effort required to get it to look good, vs how good you can already get the other 3 webcams to look, with plug and play/minimal effort. This was mostly just brought up in case people have happened to come across hearing about the webcam, and don't go buying it just because of seeing "4K 60".
Lastly, with the OBSBOT Tiny 2 and Insta360 Link, there are two AI powered webcams like the Lovense webcam, only they're better in every single way possible, aside from the feature that the Lovense webcam offers with its specific tipping functionality, which in bluey's opinion, is hardly useful whatsoever. The OBSBOT Tiny 2 was made as a competitor against the Insta360 Link so to no surprise it's objectively a better webcam, including the ability for them to upgrade certain features for future-sake, but the OBSBOT Tiny 2 tends to only be better in natural/cooler lighting scenarios, it does not do as well with image quality in warmer lighting, especially compared to Insta360. The OBSBOT Tiny 2 is also reliant on a Thunderbolt 4 USB C port, so that makes Insta360 a lot more convenient for most people. As for the Insta360 Link, for just plug and play default use, this is the best webcam color-wise that you can possibly use and it can turn vertical, making it usable for things like TikTok/Snapchat. Either way, they're both very good webcams and you will not go wrong if you choose the Insta360 Link, it's an amazing webcam.
bluey has decided to make this post so people can be more familiar with what's available in terms of the best webcams. There's a lot of really bad 1080p and especially 4k webcams, where they market their webcam beforehand as appearing to have DSLR/Mirrorless-like quality because they specifically shoot their video footage trailers for the webcam in a DSLR/Mirrorless, not with the actual webcam. Also, often checking for what the best webcams are on google, you'll often see the Logitech Brio, which is not even remotely close to the best and is long outdated, so here's a list of the webcams that bluey personally suggests for models, which are also currently at the time of this post, the best webcams.
Razer Kiyo Pro Ultra: https://www.razer.com/streaming-cameras/razer-kiyo-pro-ultra/RZ19-04420100-R3U1
Razer Kiyo Pro Ultra Footage: |
Elgato Facecam Pro: https://www.elgato.com/us/en/p/facecam-pro
Elgato Facecam Pro Footage:
OBSBOT Tiny 2: https://www.obsbot.com/store/products/tiny-2 |
Insta360 Link: https://www.insta360.com/product/insta360-link |
OBSBOT Tiny 2+Insta360 Link Footage:
there would've been some couple other honorable mentions that are good, like AVerMedia's PW515 or NexiGo Iris, but not as good as these listed above and they're about pretty close to the same price range, which makes mentioning them pretty much pointless, especially for context of camming. there is a few things bluey will mention about these webcams in regards of who they're most fitting for, to help a little more with decision-making.
Razer Kiyo Pro Ultra is only a recommendation to those that already have a DSLR/Mirrorless camera for recording their videos or if you have a photographer doing such stuff. The reason for this, is because the Kiyo Pro Ultra can only record in 4K at 24 FPS, but if you're looking for a webcam for strictly just stream use and not also for recording anything, the Kiyo Pro Ultra uses a full-frame camera Sony Starvis 2 sensor, which is the biggest sensor on any webcam and this makes it especially useful for people that stream with lots of different RGB/colored lighting, it also has an F1.7 aperture ratio, which doesn't exist in most specialty camera lens until anywhere from around $500 to $3,000+. Another important mention here is, Razer's Synapse app for the Kiyo Pro Ultra, is not compatible with Mac, so this is strictly a webcam choice only for Windows users.
Elgato Facecam Pro, even though bluey has mentioned it here, this is not a beginner friendly webcam. The Facecam Pro's autofocus is quite bad, making it a webcam a little more for Twitch-type streaming where you're just at a fixed distance and never really moving and to make it look very good, you want to color correct it through DaVinci Resolve and spend some time really perfecting how it looks. However, it can capture and record in 4K 60 FPS, which no other webcam can do, its aperture ratio is F2.0 and it has a full-frame Sony Starvis sensor (smaller than Sony Starvis 2), but with the right set-up and for those that are familiar with DaVinci Resolve and can find a use for how you stream that's more fitting with a manual focus and not auto focus, this is a webcam that can be considered, but otherwise, bluey does not suggest this webcam personally, because of the amount of effort required to get it to look good, vs how good you can already get the other 3 webcams to look, with plug and play/minimal effort. This was mostly just brought up in case people have happened to come across hearing about the webcam, and don't go buying it just because of seeing "4K 60".
Lastly, with the OBSBOT Tiny 2 and Insta360 Link, there are two AI powered webcams like the Lovense webcam, only they're better in every single way possible, aside from the feature that the Lovense webcam offers with its specific tipping functionality, which in bluey's opinion, is hardly useful whatsoever. The OBSBOT Tiny 2 was made as a competitor against the Insta360 Link so to no surprise it's objectively a better webcam, including the ability for them to upgrade certain features for future-sake, but the OBSBOT Tiny 2 tends to only be better in natural/cooler lighting scenarios, it does not do as well with image quality in warmer lighting, especially compared to Insta360. The OBSBOT Tiny 2 is also reliant on a Thunderbolt 4 USB C port, so that makes Insta360 a lot more convenient for most people. As for the Insta360 Link, for just plug and play default use, this is the best webcam color-wise that you can possibly use and it can turn vertical, making it usable for things like TikTok/Snapchat. Either way, they're both very good webcams and you will not go wrong if you choose the Insta360 Link, it's an amazing webcam.