Along with a beautiful press release of bare bones, with a couple of photos and detailed sunglasses, Rico surprised announced that its long -awaited GR IV camera would launch this fall. GR IV will remain closely on the design of GR III from 2018, and it will continue to use an auto -foxing F/2.8 lens and just one rear LCD, which has no electronic or optical visner available to compose photos and videos.
The outer part of the GR IV is very similar to the GR III / G IIIX, which contains a shutter -shaped shutter button, on / off switch and mode dial -up tops, and the right side of the back controls of the LCD. Its buttons have been re -designed, the spinning dial has been removed from its four -way directional pad. And its adjustment thumb, h, which is labeled, “adage”, it looks like May Just be a completely bending dial instead of the back and ahead of the toggle that moves left or right. (I wish this last part, because I think the thumb toggle on GR III is disturbing and faster.)
What is known based on its specific list is that GR IV holds the built-in ND filter of GR III, but it increases its large APS-C sensor resolution slightly from 24 megapixels to 26.
It will also have a high ISO range that will reach 204,800 in its maximum order, and five axis stability instead of three -axis stability. GR IV’s lens can be like a focal length and maximum aperture, like previous generations, but it is a new seven -element design in a new management that uses an additional esophagus element that has better improvements. The upcoming camera will also have a built -in built -in storage for the face and eye detection and 53 GB to track its auto -focus. The ship’s storage is great, and it is much more than 2GB of GR III, but GR IV is also declining in microSD with full size SD cards.
Although there is no price yet, Rico has confirmed that GR IV is expected to be released in the fall of 2025, which features a different type of specific defuse filter (HDF), which is “coming after winter after 2025”. The announcement also states that GR III is to be closed in July, while GR IIIX “continues for time.” Rico GR cameras have set up a niche between street photographers who value their extremely compact size and considerable affordable prices compared to a Fijfil X100 or Lika Qi.


