The new OM-5 is a small body, weighing 366 grams, designed to size up with the Zuiko line of f/4 zooms and compact prime lenses. | Image: OM System

When Olympus sold its camera division and reformed as OM System, it hyped up a push toward computational photography with its new mirrorless cameras ā€” this is not that camera. Today, OM System is announcing the new OM-5, a $1,199.99 mirrorless camera that launches late next month and looks like a zombified husk of Olympus. Iā€™m sure it will be a fine camera, but I canā€™t help feeling depressed when I look at it.

Sure, the OM-1 was technically OM Systemā€™s first camera release, but it was still branded Olympus. Now, with the OM-5, itā€™s proudly wearing the OM System name on its forehead, something thatā€™s sure to only please a handful of people in a marketing meeting somewhere.

Image: OM System
Weā€™ll have to get used to this look now, as OM System is also announcing it will be gradually transitioning all Olympus-branded cameras, lenses, accessories, binoculars, and audio devices to the revised branding.

Except, well, this still just seems like another holdover from Olympus development. Letā€™s run through a little checklist.

Same 20-megapixel four-thirds sensor as the two-year-old OM-D E-M1 Mark III? Check!
Same 6.5-stop five-axis in-body image stabilization system as that camera? Check!
Same 2.36-million dot OLED electronic viewfinder as the OM-D E-M5 Mark III itā€™s replacing? Check!
Same 121-point hybrid phase and contrast-detect autofocus system? Check!
Same 4K video that tops out at 30 fps? Check!
Same Live ND, Live Composite, Starry Sky AF and other computational photography-lite features from prior Olympus models? Check!
Joining the OM-1 in ditching those confusing alphabet-soup names littered with endless ā€œMarksā€ and going for something simpler? Okay, actually, thatā€™s great, and I support it.

Itā€™s not that this camera has nothing going for it, though the list of new features is so sparse that one of the biggest additions is support for vertical video ā€” so you donā€™t have to manually change the orientation of the file later. The new OM-5 is also IP53-rated for weatherproofing, matching the OM-1, and itā€™s the first OM System / Olympus camera you can use natively as a webcam with just a USB cable. But beyond all that, Iā€™m squinting my eyes to look for more reasons to find the OM-5 appealing for anyone other than the Olympus faithful who already have a bunch of compatible Zuiko lenses and are overdue for an affordable upgrade.

Image: OM System
The rear of the OM-5 looks identical to the previous OM-D E-M5 Mark III, and it maintains the articulating three-inch touchscreen with about 1.04 million dots.

Thereā€™s nothing wrong with having some of Olympusā€™s solid features trickle down to a lower price point, but in a time where much of the excitement around cameras is focused around systems with larger sensors, this camera feels like a slightly uncomfortable inflection point.

The joint Olympus and Panasonic-developed micro four-thirds system is a camera line that looks like it could slowly fade away, especially with Panasonicā€™s attention seemingly more focused on niche box cameras and its full-frame offerings in dire need of refreshes.

Image: OM System
The OM-5ā€™s in-body image stabilization achieves up to 6.5 stops of compensation, or 7.5 stops when paired with an optically stabilized lens.

Iā€™m hoping weā€™re just about to run out of these old Olympus leftovers in the development cycle, and weā€™ll soon see some really interesting things from OM System. We need something cool to distract ourselves from that cringe-inducing wordmark atop the camera because, right now, I fear it only makes me mourn the legacy of Olympus cameras thatā€™s at risk of slipping away.

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