Panasonic
Lumix S5II
$1797.99
Canon
Based on 126 Reddit mentions
$2116.50
Summary of sentiment across key features mentioned by users.
Discover what users really think based on Reddit discussions.
If you have no skills, you’re still likely to take lousy photos whether you have $100 worth of gear or $20,000 worth of gear. Once you have a certain level of skill, lower quality gear can absolutely hold you back, especially if you’re shooting fast-moving subjects or in low light. Sports photograph
...trying_to_adult_here in r/photography
March 24, 2026 8:45 PM
17
Here's a technical comparison https://www.rtings.com/camera/tools/compare/canon-eos-r6-mark-ii-vs-nikon-z-6iii/36079/51765?threshold=0.16 Photography wise they're both excellent and will come down to preference of what feels better in your hands and which UI you prefer If you have interest in video
...RyanGosliwafflez in r/nikon_Zseries
January 29, 2026 2:58 PM
20
Personally, I would get the R6 MK II in your scenario. The EOS R is, as you noted, basically the same camera as your 5D MK IV but with slightly better AF and only one card slot. The R6 MK II will give you a second card slot, vastly superior AF, and IBIS. The body is about the same size as the R btw.
...voltaicass in r/canon
February 14, 2026 12:13 PM
18
As an R5 II owner (using it for bird photography) I think the R6 Mark III might be a better fit for your use case. It's a lot cheaper than the R5 II and has maybe a slight edge in overall video performance (here's a detailed feature comparison). You'd get a lot of advantages over the R. To name a fe
...GlyphTheGryph in r/canon
April 2, 2026 9:05 PM
8
depends on the price. the 6d2 has some minor drawbacks: - the dynamic range isn't great. it's a late outlier in canons sensor portfolio, it has basically the dr of the 5d3, which isn't great. both the 5d4 as well as all full frame r series cameras (aside from the rp) have much improved dynamic range
...soylent81 in r/canon
July 23, 2025 8:49 AM
16
Generally lenses are a better investment than upgrading to a new body unless there is something specific you need from a new body. How is your R6 holding you back, or what do you think an R5 II would give you that would help your photography? Personally you got at least 2 lenses I would replace ASAP
...mrfixitx in r/canon
April 2, 2026 9:43 PM
6
I switched from canon to Sony when the a7r II came out and tbh I loved it, I thought the colours were great and it really rekindled my passion for photography. I switched it out for a couple of a7iiis because of the autofocus and it was so much better for weddings but then I didn’t change them again
...venabala in r/canon
November 22, 2025 6:57 PM
7
Look for a Canon EOS R8? Same sensor and autofocus of R6 Mk ii, but less "pro" body and a lot cheaper.
Stratosferi in r/canon
July 15, 2025 6:28 PM
12
Canon replaced most of the old DSLR flagship bodies with new mirrorless ones and retained the version numbering: 1D(x) -> R15D -> R56D -> R6...7D -> R7 7D was always the flagship APS-C body designed for sport and wildlife, you got better reach, faster AF and FPS, but you got a sensor with way lower
...Star_king12 in r/canon
June 28, 2025 7:50 PM
7
So, this tends to upset some people but I was very disappointed with the Rp. It's not a bad camera, but the sensor technology was a real letdown when it came out, and one of Canon's bigger mis-steps in the otherwise excellent EOS R line. Essentially, the Rp sensor is old, noisy, and slow compared to
...StriderJerusalem in r/canon
March 25, 2026 11:12 AM
3