

🚀 Capture the world up close and in stunning detail — don’t miss a single shot!
The Minolta Pro Shot 20MP Digital Camera combines a powerful 1-inch CMOS sensor with a massive 67x optical zoom lens and optical image stabilization to deliver sharp, high-resolution photos and smooth 1080p HD videos. Its 3-inch articulating LCD and 27 intelligent scene modes make shooting versatile and intuitive, while built-in Wi-Fi enables seamless wireless sharing and remote control. Perfect for outdoor enthusiasts and content creators craving professional features in a compact, stylish red body, it includes a 16GB SD card to get you started right away.







| ASIN | B08KHNQCS6 |
| Aperture modes | F2.9-F4.0 |
| Are Batteries Included | Yes |
| Aspect Ratio | Unknown |
| Auto Focus Technology | Hybrid |
| Autofocus | Yes |
| Autofocus Points | 493 |
| Best Sellers Rank | #44,778 in Electronics ( See Top 100 in Electronics ) #387 in Digital Point & Shoot Cameras |
| Bit Depth | 12 Bit |
| Brand | Minolta |
| Built-In Media | Camera Body, 16GB Memory Card, Lens Cap, Lithium-Ion Battery, AC Adaptor, Neck Strap, USB Cable, Instruction Manual, Quick Start Guide and Warranty Card |
| Camera Flash | Built-In |
| Camera Lens | 20-67X optical zoom, wide-angle lens |
| Color | Red |
| Compatible Devices | Wi-Fi-enabled devices |
| Compatible Mountings | Micro Four Thirds |
| Connectivity Technology | USB |
| Continuous Shooting | 3 FPS |
| Crop Mode | None (full-frame or default mode) |
| Customer Reviews | 3.9 out of 5 stars 828 Reviews |
| Digital-Still | No |
| Display Fixture Type | Articulating |
| Display Resolution Maximum | 460000 to 920000 dots |
| Display Type | LCD |
| Dots Per Screen | 921600 |
| Effective Still Resolution | 20 MP |
| Expanded ISO Minimum | 100 |
| Exposure Control | Automatic |
| External-Memory Size | 16 GB |
| File Format | AVI |
| Flash Memory Bus Interface Type | SD Bus |
| Flash Memory Installed Size | 16 GB |
| Flash Memory Speed Class | 4 |
| Flash Memory Supported Size Maximum | 16 GB |
| Flash Memory Type | SD |
| Flash Memory Video Speed Class | Class 10 |
| Focus Features | Autofocus |
| Focus Mode | Single-Servo AF (AF-S) |
| Focus Type | Auto Focus |
| Form Factor | Bridge |
| Hardware Interface | Secure Digital Card |
| Has Color Screen | Yes |
| Has Self-Timer | Yes |
| Image Capture Type | Stills |
| Image stabilization | Optical |
| Item Type Name | Digital camera. |
| Item Weight | 16 ounces |
| JPEG Quality Level | Normal |
| Lens Construction | Multiple elements |
| Lens Type | Telephoto |
| Light Sensitivity | ISO 100 to ISO 3200 |
| Manufacturer | Minolta |
| Maximum Aperture | 3.5 Millimeters |
| Maximum Focal Length | 67 Millimeters |
| Maximum Image Size | 20 MP |
| Maximum Shutter Speed | 30 seconds |
| Memory Slots Available | 1 |
| Memory Storage Capacity | 16 GB |
| Minimum Shutter Speed | 1 Seconds |
| Model Name | Pro Shot |
| Model Number | MN67Z-R |
| Model Series | MN |
| Movie Mode | Yes |
| Night vision | No |
| Optical Zoom | 67 x |
| Photo Sensor Resolution | 20 MP |
| Photo Sensor Size | 1-inch |
| Real Angle Of View | 56 Degrees |
| Recording Capacity | 18 Minutes |
| Remote Included | No |
| Screen Size | 3 Inches |
| Self Timer | 10 Seconds |
| Sensor Type | CMOS |
| Series Number | 67 |
| Shooting Modes | Scene |
| Special Feature | Image Stabilization |
| Supported Image Format | JPEG, AVC |
| Supported Media Type | ProductImage, VideoContent |
| Total Still Resolution | 20 MP |
| Total Video Out Ports | 1 |
| UPC | 084438961393 |
| Unit Count | 1.0 Count |
| Video Resolution | 1080p |
| Viewfinder | Electronic |
| Viewfinder Magnification | 0.5x |
| Warranty Description | 1 Year Manufacturer |
| White Balance Settings | Flash torch |
| Wireless Technology | Wi-Fi |
| Write Speed | 5 fps (for continuous shooting), 10 MB/s (for Full HD video recording) |
| Zoom | Optical Zoom |
D**S
Great for outdoor zoom shots
This camera really shines if you want to take pictures of items outside some distance away. I got it for taking pictures when I go hiking, backpacking, trips. My other "camera" is a Pixel 7 phone (which produces pictures on par or better then iPhone/Samsung). For quick snap shots of kids, or indoors the Pixel phone works great and in many cases better then this camera, but it can't compete with a big optical zoom lens. If you want a camera that has a big optical zoom without spending a lot of money this camera is for you. I have attached two photos. The 1st photo is from my Pixel Phone of a bird in the yard behind mine. I added a red arrow so you can see how far away this bird is. Except for the arrow these photos are directly from the cameras and are completely unedited. The 2nd photo is from THIS camera zoomed in on the bird. No phone can do that! Even with max digital zoom and/or cropping the Pixel phone just produced a burly blob. With this camera you can see the bird clearly. If this is what you are looking for get this camera. I also used this camera at an air show with some great close ups of planes that where high up. As an outdoor zoom camera it's great, but not any better (or even worse) then a phone for indoor snap shots.
S**R
Awesome camera, great price, lots of expensive functions, but..menus take some getting used to
I have always used Canon camera's. Used to the functioning and operations. This is NOT that. The manual is less than enlightening (like a professor writing for a 5 yr old) But once you figure it out..this thing is awesome! It has so many features exactly like the much more expensive cameras and even a few more. I bought this camera for three reasons. Cost/for functions..doing time lapse (as a beginner)..and because I can't afford to spend thousands of dollars on a long lens for zooming for my Canon that would match it. As far as functions, the menu is different. Press menu, and it shows you a screen with a row of options on either side. Look carefully..and one of the items in the row on the left has a circle highlighting it. I missed it for the longest time. I'm a grandma..and bifocally challenged..so...To choose which option you want to change, press the edge of the circle button on the back of the camera up or down and press "select" . FYI it is not obvious, but when you hit the bottom of the left row, hit down again and it will skip to the top of the right side row. I assumed I'd have to press the side of the back circle to get to that row and..nope. The screen will then give you options to choose for that item function. Move the back circle left or right to choose and then press "select". Crazy different from my Canon, but once you get it, you're good to go. Practice, Practice, Practice before you go out and shoot. For point and shoot, it's wonderful. I'm not a professional but wanted to do more difficult shots so have been using M for manual more and more. If you use manual (again, not obvious) and want to change the F stop, shutter speed, and iso, etc you have to press the +/- button on the top of the camera. Weird, but... it highlights the the options in yellow on the bottom of the lcd. Press the back dial left or right to choose which setting you want to adjust. Then ROTATE that same wheel to the level you want. Simple, after you find out how. If it shuts off while you're choosing, just press the +/- again. Once you know how to do that you can actually do a custom setting. It's not difficult. I use this camera mostly for long zoom shots of birds and wildlife. They move quickly. So I set the Custom up (as an example) for f2.8 1/3200 sec and then Auto ISO. Then when I only have a second to change to catch a great shot, I just turn the top dial to CS. My Canon SL3 doesn't have programable buttons at all. Choose your settings and then turn the top dial to CS, create custom mode, yes (or something like that,follow the prompts). Then whatever you chose just previous as your go-to quick shot settings, it will remember them. Anytime you want those settings, turn the top dial to CS. RAW/Jpeg. I have editing softward that lets me do amazing things so RAW is a must. But for the life of me, I couldn't find more than jpeg or jpeg fine in the Quality choices in M mode. You'd think in M that's where RAW would be, right? Nope. I turned the top dial and eventually found that choice in the A (aperture) mode. jpeg/jpeg fine/RAW/ or RAW plus jpeg. I now get to shoot in Raw/plus jpeg. Once you choose that option it DOES retain that setting in the other modes. Just don't understand why the RAW choice isn't in M. BTW, the software is the latest version of Luminar Neo based on AI. Don't have to learn a million names, or process functions. It's all based on sliders. Hint..I'm a Grandma. Try it, like what it does, or back it off. I bought the one time version last fall and it also does HDR Merge, Photo Stackiing, Supersharp, Noisless AI, Panorama stitching and Upscale. I bought this camera because it did in-camera time lapse. Something I was interest in learning at the time. Simple to set up in the menu. When it's done, it combines all the pictures into a video. Love it. Two things. You can't get a single image to print because it turns the time lapse into a video. BUT..with the Luminar Neo Software you can fix that issue. In the Panorama stitch option, you can also upload videos from this camera or panning on your phone. I watched a video on Utube but haven't tried it out with a time lapse from this camera yet. But if you drag the video into the Video option in the Panorama tool it converts the video into stills. THEN, you can choose a single pic and print it, or make a Pano out of the whole batch. OMG Shooting panoramas on this camera is simple..but you better have a tripod to hold it still (with a level/swivel built in, and and it must swivel smoothly or you'll get an error message. Left to right is best. I bought something called a z-mount (created by A Wallace and Move Shoot Move). was $39 on Amazon but not only swivels smoothly but adjusts (hence/Z) to allow you to adjust your camera from Portrait mode to Landscape with a flipper. No fussing with an L bracket. Great on the fly and also because I am learning astrophotography and want to shoot some of each direction in Milky Way Pano's . I'm not affilliated with Luminar Neo or the Zmount people. Just really like them.
W**I
Great Point and shoot with a long Zoom for the non-pro.
Why did you pick this product vs others?: For the non-pro that is seeking a light-weight point and shot zoom this is by far is my choice. Previously I used a Cannon 420 sx for 10 years that became my trusted companion for hiking, hunting, fishing, cycling, traveling and family photos. I thought I had bought new but checked as it arrived with a stamp "used but in good condition.” I was frantic. I checked and did buy used but this thing was exactly like new without the box but wrapped safely. It comes with one battery, a stand alone charger, strap, lens cover and I think a 32 GB ultra 1 sd card but not sure and no way top check now. I use Macro for flowers and the rest of its use I keep on live. Its not a $5000 camera so don’t expect its processes to be that equivalent. For < $500 its an absolute steal!
G**U
Gave this two chances, neither worked
This camera seemed promising: a lot of features at a low price point. However, the quality control is lacking. The first one shipped to me had a dysfunctional card reader - we acertained it was not the card, just the reader. The replacement one we got would not charge. We got this one working using the battery from the first camera just to try it out. Zoom level is "ok" but stablization and ability to focus on far-off objects is noticeably worse than our other camera from a different brand but similar price point/zoom. The battery ran out within 15 minutes in spite of being charged for a full day on the first camera and barely used. I'm returning both shipments and writing this review with regrets, because there are some genuinely promising things about this camera that made me really wish it worked. - it's light and not too bulky - the color of pictures taken on its screen looks more vibrant than our other non-professional level bridge camera - Wifi and app are great and much easier to use than our other camera, making it easy to get things off of the camera I hope the manufacture sees the review and focus on the quality more in the future. As-is this reminds me of a "Shanzhai" (cheap knock-offs) electronics we got during a trip in China some years ago which gave out after 2 days: sounds fancy and a bit too good to be true and is actually too good to be true. Buyers beware.
L**I
Granddaughter Loves It!
Our beautiful granddaughter is taking a digital photography course at her online high school so we decided to purchase her a camera. I spent a long time researching for the best camera and this one definitely checked all of the boxes on paper. We give it to her and it was a huge surprise and success. First thing she loved about it was, of course, I⃨⃨T⃨⃨ ⃨I⃨⃨S⃨⃨ ⃨P⃨⃨U⃨⃨R⃨⃨P⃨⃨L⃨⃨E⃨⃨, which is obviously important when you are seventeen (17) years old! The quality of the camera is everything you would expect from Minolta! It easily connects to the WiFi to transfer photos and videos. It has all the pre-set modes for picture taking such as: party, children, portraits etc if one did not know how to set or change the settings themselves. It is just the best camera for the beginner and for those who are advanced photographers.
A**R
wood have bern a good camera except for internal spot
would have been a decent camera once I got it all set up ( dont bother with minolta app not worth the trouble just get a dongle) a few test shots and a visble spot in upper left quarter. carefully inspected outside snd cleaned with photo lens wipe and it still appears. even more noticeable when in zoom mode. dissapoining as we were using for a special even in a week so requesting a refund. an internal spot can't be fixed. otherwise imaging from the few test spots were good for price if camera. zooming is a bit instead tripod would be recommended. sunset mode was great. dog mode was good though some blurry shots. photo with spot added to review size of camera feel of camera were good. great point and shoot. case it comes with is flimsy. SD card never would format used a secondary one I had and it worked. instructions were not good in the wireless setup. that was frustrating. dont use the wireless just get an SD card reader to down load much easier. only had it for a few hours so unable to comment on printed picture quality, battery life, or video quality. did not try all the modes either. if you get this camera test out the pictures right away
P**B
Quality camera
Good quality photos and video
R**R
unreliable
I bought this to take on vacation in Costa Rica. It offered features I was looking for; compact size, good zoom, macro and panoramic capability. Unfortunately the camera would intermittently fail, showing an error message or format disc message. A few minutes later this would be gone and the camera would be functioning again. Needless to say, I missed some priceless shots of wildlife in the rain forest. When the camera did function, I was not impressed with the quality of the pictures. I took better shots with my phone, which I used for the rest of the trip.
Trustpilot
2 months ago
2 months ago