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Reviews of Olympus OM-D E-M5

Testseek.com have collected 169 expert reviews of the Olympus OM-D E-M5 and the average rating is 85%. Scroll down and see all reviews for Olympus OM-D E-M5.
Award: Most Awarded April 2012
April 2012
 
(85%)
169 Reviews
Users
(92%)
164 Reviews
85 0 100 169

The editors liked

  • Very good photo quality (though best results are achieved by shooting RAW)
  • Wellbuilt
  • Weathersealed metal body with a retro flair
  • Fiveaxis
  • Sensorshift image stabilization system
  • Beautiful 3inch articulating touchscreen OLED display with 610
  • 000 pixels
  • Plus a large and sharp EVF
  • Full manual controls
  • With lots of white balance options
  • Five kinds of bracketing
  • Realtime tone curve adjustment
  • A cute little camera that's packed with features and offers excellent image quality
  • Appealing body design
  • Smaller camera is easy to hold and quite small
  • Battery grip makes the E-M5 feel like a tiny professional camera
  • EVF works well
  • Tilting OLED touchpanel display
  • Water resistant body
  • Advanced in-body image stabilization
  • Excell...
  • A dust-and-weather-sealed design distinguishes the Olympus OM-D E-M5 from the rest of the interchangeable-lens crowd
  • And its class-leading performance doesn't hurt
  • Either. Plus
  • It's got an interesting
  • Relatively streamlined shooting design
  • Excellent image quality
  • Very good metering
  • Reliable Automatic WhiteBalance
  • Superb builtin stabilization
  • Virtually no shutterlag
  • Fast contrastdetect AF
  • Good shottoshot speed
  • Very responsive
  • Excellent automatic Manual Focus Assist
  • Unique LiveBulb m
  • Outstanding image quality
  • * Highly customizable feature set
  • * Compact design
  • * Wide selection of accessories and lenses
  • * Weather resistant body
  • * Art Filters add fun factor
  • * Good macro mode on 12-50mm zoom
  • * Fast autofocus and burst mode
  • Good images and video
  • DSLRlike feature set
  • Compact
  • Stylish form factor
  • Compact body. Fully weather sealed. Crisp LCD EVF. Articulating rear display. Sharp kit lens. Impressive high ISO performance. Fast autofocus. Shoots at 9 frames per second. In-body stabilization. Large native lens library. Optional grip available.
  • Go Back to Top. Skip To
  • Start of Article
  • Cameras
  • Digital cameras
  • Micro Four Thirds
  • Mirrorless Cameras
  • Olympus
  • Top3
  • Excellent image and video quality
  • Blistering performance
  • Extremely attractive
  • Great battery life
  • Superior image quality
  • Even in low light
  • You can really push ISO without sacrificing resolution
  • Durability
  • Very powerful auto-focus and image stabilization technology
  • Very good image quality
  • Even at high ISO
  • Bright
  • Punchy JPEGs make the most of camera's capability
  • Very fast autofocus with most Micro Four Thirds lenses
  • Weather-sealed body
  • Built-in image stabilization helps increase number of sharp shots (in single-frame mode)
  • Good level of direct control despite small body
  • Tilting OLED screen very good
  • Large amount of control over image parameters
  • A
  • Incredibly fast autofocus5-axis image stabilizationManual/auto-zoom kit lens
  • Tough weather-sealed build quality
  • Outstanding High ISO noise performance
  • Great quality viewfinder and tilting OLED touch-screen
  • 5-axis image stabilisation which works with any lens
  • 2
  • 3
  • 5 and 7-frame auto bracketing.
  • Lovely design
  • Premium build
  • Solid performance and great images

The editors didn't like

  • Occasional underexposure and highlight clipping
  • Tiny
  • Cluttered button layout makes it way too easy to accidentally press the wrong one
  • OLED display difficult to see outdoors
  • AF system tends to "hunt" when recording movies
  • "Hiss" from IS system may bother some folks
  • No builtin flash (though included external flash is pretty good)
  • Movies cannot be edited incamera
  • Full manual on CDROM
  • Just never felt comfortable shooting with it
  • Price
  • $999 (body only
  • In black or silver)
  • $1
  • 299 (black or silver body with black M.ZUIKO Digital ED 1250 mm f3.56.3 EZ lens)
  • Www.olympusamerica.com
  • Odd power switch location
  • Exposure compensation dial changes easily
  • Can't be turned off
  • Small buttons
  • EVF proximity sensor sometimes activates unexpectedly
  • Moderately high chromatic aberration from 12-50mm kit lens
  • No in-camera chromatic aberrati...
  • The photo quality is solid
  • But not outstanding
  • Especially if you shoot only JPEG
  • Poor color accuracy
  • Lowcontrast EVF
  • Not always ExposurePriority and frequently wrong LiveHistogram
  • Modal ExposureCompensation
  • Some tiny buttons
  • Uncomfortable eyelets
  • Poorly placed tripod mount
  • Low battery life
  • Rear controldial uncomfortably high
  • Menu system can be daunting
  • * No built-in mic adapter
  • * Small buttons can be difficult for large fingers
  • * Soft humming noise when powered up
  • Price when rated
  • $1000 (body only)
  • $1300 with 12-50mm 1
  • 3.5-6.3 zoom lens
  • Costly bodyonly configuration
  • Grip and lenses add expense
  • A 2x crop factor doesn't lend itself to wide angle shooting
  • External flash. Lacks a standard mic input
  • No builtin popup flash. Can't change exposure settings while shooting video. Shallow eye cup diminishes the EVF's effectiveness in bright outdoor situations
  • Expensive for a Micro Four Thirds camera
  • Smaller sensor than most $1
  • 000-plus cameras
  • Button design
  • No pop-up flash – accessory only
  • There can be some in-camera digging before you get your customized settings up and running
  • Focus tracking distinctly unreliable
  • Image stabilization not effective for continuous shooting
  • Small controls sometimes awkward (especially with cold/gloved hands)
  • No in-camera correction of CA (which can be problematic with 12-50mm kit zoom)
  • Default JPEG settings a bit keen to blur detail away
  • Several useful features hidden in obscure and confusingly-named menu options
  • Otherwise useful H
  • ExpensiveBattery meter issues at launchPoor focus accuracy in low-contrast scenes
  • Screen only tilts and there's no touch functions in movie modes
  • Distracting whirring noise from stabilisation motor
  • No built-in mic socket
  • Flash unit clips-on rather then being built-in
  • Continuous AF not as consistent as a phase-detect system.
  • Base ISO of 100 would be welcome

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Reviews

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Score
 
  Published: 2012-05-22, Author: Nimish , review by: digit.in

  • Dedicated electronic viewfinder, Great ergonomics, Beautiful image quality, Impressive low light performance
  • Expensive
  • We had a brief hands-on time with the latest and probably, the greatest micro four-thirds camera from Olympus – the OM-D E-M5, and we had promised of doing a detailed review. The OM-D E-M5 made it to our labs last week, and after exploring it for a goo...

 
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(70%)
 
  Published: 2012-05-18, review by: pcworld.in

  • Abstract:  Olympus reached back to its design roots when crafting the new OM-D E-M5 micro four thirds camera. The original OM line of film SLRs was known for its rich feature set and stylish, compact design. Now, released as a digital body, the first offering in ...

 
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-
 
  Published: 2012-02-08, Author: Shawn , review by: asia.cnet.com

  • Abstract:  Olympus has just announced the OM-D E-M5, which is its first addition to its new camera lineup that runs alongside its popular Pen-series cameras. The new OM-D E-M5 sports a 16-megapixel Live MOS sensor, 3-inch OLED tilting screen and a 1.44 million-do...

 
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-
 
  Published: 2015-06-08, Author: tan , review by: thestar.com.my

  • Nice build quality, compact, High Res Shot mode, lots of customisable buttons
  • Button overload may confuse some users
  • The OM-D E-M5 Mark II is a really great little camera for the advanced amateur – it has a lot of features and is built tough.The feature set is almost the same as the E-M1's with the added bonus of the High Res Shot mode. If anything, it perhaps loses out...

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(80%)
 
  Published: 2012-06-11, Author: Simon , review by: stuff.tv/my/

  • Very fast autofocus, Sublime picture and video quality, Not as big as it looks
  • Buttons feel a bit naff

 
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(100%)
 
  Published: 2012-03-23, Author: Alvin , review by: hardwarezone.com.my

  • Low noise at very high ISO settings, Superb handling, Excellent image stabilization, Fast and accurate autofocus, Gorgeous retroinspired design
  • Cramped and small back buttons, Less noise difference at lower ISOs, Camera strap hinders handling, Banding in some very high ISO shots
  • There's just something about the Olympus OM-D E-M5.We could list its specs: 16MP image sensor, 5-axis image stabilization, weather-resistant body. We could tell you how well the camera handles with the twin control dials, quick AF speed and easy AF point...

 
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(90%)
 
  Published: 2012-12-16, Author: Ferdz , review by: ferdzdecena.com

  • Abstract:  So I was off to an island where the reef is excellently preserved and it would be a shame if I didn't take any underwater pictures. I was thinking of getting a dedicated underwater camera but I thought the price was too much so decided on getting a Dicapa...

 
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-
 
  Published: 2012-07-13, Author: Lou , review by: fhm.com.ph

  • Abstract:  Photography seems to be the hobby of the moment thanks to the accessibility of entry-level cameras and the imagined productivity you enjoy during these cheesy gatherings called “photo walks.” Unlike Swiss watches or fast cars, photography as a hobby can b...

 
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-
 
  Published: 2012-03-23, Author: Alvin , review by: hardwarezone.com.ph

  • There's just something about the Olympus OM-D E-M5.We could list its specs: 16MP image sensor, 5-axis image stabilization, weather-resistant body. We could tell you how well the camera handles with the twin control dials, quick AF speed and easy AF point ...

 
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  Award


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  Published: 2012-07-10, Author: Yeong , review by: digitalone.com.sg

  • Abstract:  THE OM-D E-M5 is the digital edition of the 35mm SLR Olympus OM series which came out in the 1970s.This mirrorless Micro Four Thirds camera has six notable features:A dust- and splash-proof body, which is a first for mirrorless cameras. A five-axis image-...

 
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