


Our biggest complaint is more of a little niggle and that’s the mounting system. We’ll touch on each of those soon, but it’s all packed into a rounded metal body that feels well built and sturdy. The Brio is deceptively small for everything it packs in on top of the 4K camera, as there’s also a surprisingly competent stereo microphone, activity light, infrared sensor for Microsoft Hello and more. Inside the box for your money you get the Brio itself, a mounting clip, a privacy shutter, a 2.2 metre long USB-C to USB-A cable and a carrying bag.Īs with many Logitech reviews we’ve done in the past the quality here is fantastic. So we know what niche the Brio fills the price is the real kicker here with Logitech representatives who supplied our returned review sample telling us the South African RRP is R3 695.

A 4K stream for your dice rolls and cards could be a lifesaver depending on your hobby. Usually 4K is used in 1080P content creation when you want to capture as much of a scene as possible in case you need to crop in at a later stage while not losing quality.įor leisure the first thing we thought of when we saw the Brio was for tabletop gaming which, much like increased business meetings now done online, can’t be done traditionally because of the pandemic. For content creation there’s simply the jump to make video in 4K, but it also comes in handy for 1080P too. Marketed for business on its official website many people will also think of content creation and leisure applications for a 4K webcam. Every year 4K makes strides towards toppling 1080P as the king of resolutions, but there are reasons to make the jump right now, and the Logitech Brio is one of the biggest names in that space for webcams.
