Camp snap pro flashback one35 v2 digicam camera comparison review – Breaking News & Latest Updates 2026
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Retro camera shootout: Camp Snap Pro vs. Flashback One35 V2

Two fun cameras try to combine the charm of disposable cameras with the convenience of digital. One succeeds.

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Fun vibes. Okay-ish photos.
| Photo: Antonio G. Di Benedetto / The Verge
Antonio G. Di Benedetto
is a reviewer covering laptops and the occasional gadget. He spent over 15 years in the photography industry before joining The Verge as a deals writer in 2021.

There’s been a surge of interest over the last few years in inexpensive digital cameras. Younger folks are snapping up old point-and-shoots because they view the aesthetic as more authentic and more appealing than smartphone images. Companies are even rereleasing old tech at new prices. And there are cameras like the original Camp Snap: a $70 single-button point-and-shoot with no screen, designed as a modern take on a disposable film camera. It’s cheap enough to send off with a kid to summer camp and accessible enough for just about anyone to enjoy its lo-fi aesthetic.

I’ve been testing two charming examples of this formula: the $99 Camp Snap Pro (aka CS-Pro), which is an upgrade to the original Camp Snap and looks like an all-plastic Fujifilm X100, and the Flashback One35 V2, which costs $119 and looks exactly like a disposable camera.

Both cameras aim to give you the aesthetics and screen-free experience of a disposable film camera with the convenience of digital. One of them hits the mark.

6

Verge Score

$99

The Good

  • Simple dial for choosing four on-demand film profiles
  • Xenon flash with two settings
  • Has a tripod mount (rare for these kinds of cameras)
  • No app, Wi-Fi, or Bluetooth connection needed

The Bad

  • Setting date and time requires a screwdriver
  • Silver-and-black styling is classic but a little boring
  • Non-replaceable battery

4

Verge Score

$119

The Good

  • Compact size
  • Fun and intuitive companion app
  • Analog-like ritual of shooting with in-app “developing”
  • RAW capture is possible (if you want that)

The Bad

  • Lots of missed shots due to slow-to-wake advance dial
  • Lens is too close to grip, leading to fingers in shots
  • Film styles sometimes failed to “load” in the camera
  • Non-replaceable battery

Both the Camp Snap Pro and Flashback One35 V2 are compact and built from lightweight, cheap plastic. The Flashback is noticeably smaller, about the size of a disposable film camera, and it slips into my back pocket better. But both are best toted in a jacket pocket, small bag, or purse. They don’t feel precious like regular cameras. My wife and I own an original Camp Snap, and we’d often toss it in our diaper bag without giving a damn.

Neither camera is special when it comes to specs (scroll to the bottom for a side-by-side comparison table). The Camp Snap Pro’s 22.5mm-equivalent lens and 16-megapixel sensor are respectively wider and higher resolution than the standard Camp Snap (8-megapixel, 32mm equivalent). The Flashback V2 has a 13-megapixel sensor. These basic smartphone-sized image sensors and tiny lenses yield image quality somewhere between a disposable film camera and an old phone. Unlike film, you’re not paying money with each shot. And they both feature proper xenon flashes for brightly illuminating dark settings at close distances — a sought-after look that also helps alleviate their awful low-light performance. (The original Camp Snap’s LED flash is mostly useless and not as flattering.)

<em>The Flashback (right) is the cuter camera, but the Camp Snap Pro (left) is the better one.</em>
<em>The CS-Pro has a battery level indicator of four green LED lights reminiscent of old MacBook Pro laptops. Its shot counter is just a simple number that counts up as you take pictures.</em>
<em>The bottom compartment houses the microSD card slot and physical buttons to set the date and time. It’s secured with a screw to prevent child tampering.</em>
<em>Sadly there’s no changeable battery there, like you might expect.</em>
<em>The four-profile mode dial is simple and effective.</em>
<em>All style, limited substance.</em>
<em>One functional advantage (the only one) the Flashback has over the CS-Pro is a red light telling you when the flash is ready to fire.</em>
<em>The Flashback counts down from its maximum per-roll shots of 27 exposures.</em>
<em>I hate this advance dial. It slows you down more than it should, and it hurts your thumb after a bunch of consecutive turns.</em>
<em>But the lens placement is absolutely ridiculous. Look at how close my fingertips sit next to the lens when I hold the grip. And I don’t have particularly big hands or long fingers.</em>
1/15
The Flashback (right) is the cuter camera, but the Camp Snap Pro (left) is the better one.

But the biggest way these cameras differ is how you use them. The Camp Snap Pro has a dial that lets you swap between four filters; the defaults are STD (standard), VTG1 (vintage 1, with a warm magenta tone), VTG2 (vintage 2, with a green tone and boosted blues), and B&W (black and white). Each preset is user-customizable, allowing you to replace each with a custom look made in Camp Snap’s online Filter Builder. The original Camp Snap has a community built around free and paid downloadable filters, though some aren’t available on the CS-Pro yet. The included 4GB microSD card fits over 1,000 photos, and you can download them via USB-C cable or microSD card reader.

The Flashback also has four preset filters: classic, mono (black and white), beta (a reddish-toned look), and cine (exaggerating a teal-and-orange aesthetic). But you can only change between them in the camera’s companion app (iOS / iPad and Android), and you use them as “rolls” for up to 27 shots at a time. This is meant to mimic a disposable film camera. Once you select a filter, you’re stuck with it for the whole “roll,” though you can download a roll early and start over. The One35 V2 pairs to a phone or tablet via Bluetooth, allowing you to check battery level, enable a self-timer, or change your film type. Downloading the images to your device requires either Wi-Fi or a cable. By default, the app makes you wait 24 hours to see your images. Alternatively, images can be instantly developed by activating Digicam Mode, which I enabled after just one batch of shots.

<em>Camp Snap Pro sample photos.</em>
<em>The flash can be pleasing as a fill.</em>
<em>The low-light quality, not so pleasing.</em>
<em>Standard color profile.</em>
<em>Some outtakes and B-sides from CES.</em>
<em>This was not an official </em>Verge <em>presence at this Vegas immersive art experience.</em>
<em>Though I kinda feel like I’m diving into </em>The Verge<em> with this one.</em>
<em>Standard color profile.</em>
<em>Vintage 1 color profile.</em>
<em>The metering on these cameras are easily fooled by bright light sources.</em>
<em>And these toy cameras are definitely not great for food photos in a dark restaurant unless you use the flash.</em>
<em>If you own one of these cameras and you have small children, they will want to use them. And they will inevitably shoot pictures backwards of their faces.</em>
<em>And other things.</em>
<em>And nothing.</em>
<em>Oh, it’s their thumb over part of the lens. I see it now.</em>
1/35
Camp Snap Pro sample photos.

It’s a nice app, but virtual roll-by-roll shooting quickly goes from charming to annoying. I’ve had a few occasions where my film type didn’t apply to the camera, causing rolls to come out in the wrong color tones or in black and white when I thought I was shooting color. Waiting to see your photos, and the occasional unexpected result, are part of the charm of analog photography, but I never dropped off a roll of black-and-white film and had it come back in color or vice versa.

The One35’s dedication to the bit has other drawbacks as well. After 27 shots, you can’t use the camera again until you offload your pictures to the app or a computer. This negates one of the major advantages of digital cameras, not to mention the whole point of a #screenfree camera. You can’t just hand it to a kid and set them loose with it. And its reliance on a disposable-camera-style advance winder to wake it up and re-cock the shutter means you constantly miss shots. The advance dial takes only one turn to wake the camera but around eight to prime the shutter. It doesn’t stay ready to shoot like a proper film disposable camera, which makes no sense for something designed around spontaneity.

<em>Flashback One35 V2 sample photos.</em>
<em>This poor elf wasn’t treated well by the Flashback’s flash.</em>
<em>Standard setting, flash off.</em>
<em>Standard setting, flash on. I take hot pot dinners very seriously by the way.</em>
<em>Standard setting, flash off.</em>
<em>Standard setting, flash on.</em>
<em><em>See my fingers encroaching in the image? </em></em>
<em>You probably see them by now.</em>
<em>The flash is a little hit-or-miss. Here, it blew out my daughter’s face so badly that I don’t mind putting her picture on the site.</em>
<em>I thought I was shooting a color profile for this batch of vacation photos. I love black and white, but seeing these pictures come out like this was an unplesant surprise.</em>
<em>I tried a little street photography with the Flashback. It’s workable, but it ain’t great.</em>
<em>The Flashback “beta” film style.</em>
<em>The Flashback “beta” film style.</em>
<em>There’s certainly a charm to its softness and noisy image quality.</em>
1/43
Flashback One35 V2 sample photos.

When asked if this issue could be circumvented, Flashback’s external PR rep Bethany Andros told The Verge, “Yes, this is a known issue we’re trying to fix right now.” A firmware update will help, but it won’t solve the Flashback’s other big handling issue: due to lens placement, wrapping your hand around the camera’s sizable grip often results in my fingers getting in the shot. What’s the point of having a nice contoured grip if you can’t use it?

As far as image quality, the Camp Snap Pro yields a significantly sharper and cleaner image than the Flashback. Even the standard Camp Snap, which I also used for comparison shots, has slightly better image quality. “Better” is of course subjective, since these cameras are all about vibes. There’s none of the technical sharpness or minimal noise we’re used to in modern phones and full-size cameras, but the aesthetic flaws and limitations are kind of the point. I’ve even come across users within the Flashback subreddit preferring the One35 V1’s image quality over the V2, because it looks worse.

<em>Click through this gallery for direct comparisons between the Camp Snap Pro, Flashback, and original Camp Snap.</em>
<em>Camp Snap Pro standard setting.</em>
<em>Flashback classic setting.</em>
<em>Camp Snap original.</em>
<em>Camp Snap Pro standard setting.</em>
<em>Flashback classic setting.</em>
<em>Camp Snap original.</em>
<em>Camp Snap Pro vintage 1 setting.</em>
<em>Camp Snap Pro vintage 2 setting.</em>
<em>Camp Snap Pro black and white setting.</em>
<em>Camp Snap Pro vintage 1 setting.</em>
<em>Camp Snap Pro vintage 2 setting.</em>
<em>Camp Snap Pro black and white setting.</em>
1/13
Click through this gallery for direct comparisons between the Camp Snap Pro, Flashback, and original Camp Snap.

I recommend the Camp Snap Pro, and I simply can’t say the same for the Flashback. The One35’s concept is fun and endearing (and its see-through variants look amazing), but by trying to replicate the physical experience of the disposable camera, it winds up keeping the old flaws and adding new ones.

The Camp Snap Pro is focused on the utility disposable cameras provided in the days before digital cameras and smartphones. It’s cheaper than the Flashback, easier to use, more customizable, and yields a higher image quality — but not too high. It’s perfect for someone who wants something just a little better than the basic Camp Snap, or at least a proper flash. If you don’t take the bait on the Flashback’s nostalgic stylings, there’s just no comparison.

Tech specs comparison

Camp Snap ProFlashback One35 V2
Resolution16 megapixels13 megapixels
SensorType-1/3.06 CMOSType-1/3.06 CMOS
ISO rangeNot disclosed100 to 1000
RAW supportNoYes, DNG format
Focal length2.56mm (22.5mm equivalent)4.15mm
Aperturef/2.2f/2.2
FocusingFixedFixed
Focus range3 ft / 0.9 m to infinityNot disclosed
Lens filter thread37mmNone
Shutter speed range1/30 to 1/10001/6 to 1/5000
Number of filter presets44
Custom filter supportYesNo
Self-timerNoYes
Storage4GB microSD, removable“Sufficient for 27 photos in DNG+JPG format,” non-removable
Tripod mountYesNo
ConnectivityUSB-CUSB-C, Bluetooth, Wi-Fi
Batteryestimated 500 shots, USB-C rechargeable, non-removableestimated 15 rolls / 405 shots, USB-C charging, non-removable
Dimensions5 x 3 x 1 inches / 127 x 76.2 x 25.4 mm4.4 x 2.3 x 1.3 inches / 112 x 59 x 32 mm
Weight7 oz / 198 gNot disclosed

Photography by Antonio G. Di Benedetto / The Verge

Update, February 23rd: Added Flashback tech specs from the manufacturer.

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