Pros
- Capable of close focus
- Excellent video and sound quality
- Nice manual shutter design
- Magnetic attachment to mount
Cons
- No support for Windows Hello facial security
Logitech’s first significantly updated webcam in way too long, the MX Brio 4K surprised the hell out of me. So did its pinstripe-buyer equivalent, the identical MX Brio 705. But to be fair, the bar was low. Logitech launched one of the first 4K webcams, the Logitech Brio, in 2017 and then just kind of left it to languish for seven years. Years in which demand surged, the related technologies improved dramatically, and new players like Insta360, Obsbot, computer manufacturers and more entered the consumer market.
And what do you know: For its $200 price, which puts it at the typical price for mainstream 4K webcams, it’s quite good. It delivers excellent image quality with the broad-featured software — like most webcams, without the software it’s just OK — Â focuses quickly and accurately and the built-in mic has very good sound.
But its ability to focus closely — up to a couple of inches from the lens, as far as I can tell — distinguishes it from from almost all other webcams. That’s not something that a lot of people may need, but if you need it for things like demonstrations, quick captures or more, then this is your camera. And Logitech uses the front ring the way I always wanted it to on webcams: to open and close an internal lens cover.
Less rare but still uncommon, the webcam attaches to the monitor mount via a magnet that doubles as a tripod socket. Being able to quickly detach the camera without removing the mount from its perch means you can easily put it back, as well. Though the mount isn’t that big and has a sticky pad to secure it to the back of a monitor (well, secure it…
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