This web site uses cookies to improve your experience. By viewing our content, you are accepting the use of cookies. To find out more and change your cookie settings, please view our cookie policy. Close

Nikon Coolpix S210 review

Our rating

3.0 stars out of 5

User rating

4 stars out of 5

See all user reviews

What do you think?

Verdict

The Nikon Coolpix S210 is the epitomy of the compact camera ethos: it's small, it takes pictures and it's very, very bland. We can't ignore the demand for simple, pocketable and cheap cameras, but with almost no features, clunky controls and an uninspiring screen the S210 just isn't trying

Good

  • Metal frame
  • Great price

Bad

  • No battery indicator
  • No image stabilisation
  • Counter-intuitive menu buttons
  • General blandness

In this review

Nikon believes that the Coolpix S210 could be one of its bigger sellers this year. It's certainly got a friendly price, costing £140 online. This 8-megapixel compact camera ticks the size and affordability boxes that could see it fly off the shelves, and with technology potentially trickling down from Nikon's stonking higher-end compacts and dSLRs, it certainly has potential to make a heroic charge to the top.

Design
The S210 has a credit card-size width, but it's actually quite chunky: the screen has a raised bezel area that adds depth. The 64mm (2.5-inch) screen feels lost in the frame. This size of screen is becoming something of a disappointment when compared with equally small cameras that sport 69mm (2.7-inch) or even 76mm (3-inch) screens.

At least it's light yet sturdy, thanks to an all-metal frame. The brushed metal front looks good but the gloss effect on the rest of the frame looks unfortunately cheap. The button layout has the standard four buttons and a circular clickpad, all clearly labeled but plasticky. The flat zoom rocker is also lacklustre.

Features
The menu system on the Coolpix has always struck us as clunky. Here, we found that the mode and menu buttons were somewhat counter-intuitive: pressing Mode allowed you to access the setup menu but not scene modes, which are confusingly accessed by pressing Menu. It didn't help that pressing the Menu button had a different result when the camera was set to manual shooting than when it was set to a scene mode.


You'll find the usual selection of scene modes on the S210

We use the term 'manual' loosely. Twelve steps of exposure compensation are easily available with one touch from the clickpad, but there is no aperture or shutter priority or option to limit aperture and shutter speeds. White balance and ISO speed, up to ISO 2,000, can be adjusted. We're disappointed to find that optical image stabilisation isn't available -- we've come to expect it on cameras of this size.

As well as red-eye reduction and automatic flash settings, you also get a fill-in flash for photographing backlit subjects, such as a person with bright sun behind them.

  • Print

User reviews1

Add your review

boroboy's avatar
4 stars out of 5

boroboy 8 August 2008

Good: I like the 2.5" screen so you can actually view the pictures you have took.

Bad: The 3x zoom because you can not zoom in a lot.

Comment: This is a great little camera it is the best camera i have ever bought it was pretty cheap too. The picture quallity it amazing it a great for beginers in photography. Great Buy

:) :)

Tell us what you think

Log in with your CNET UK or Facebook account to post a user review, or click Join to create an account

Step 1

0 out of 5

Step 2

Submit

Please log in, register or login with Facebook to add a review or comment

Should I buy it?

Nikon Coolpix S210

Ask your Facebook friends and Twitter followers if you should buy the Nikon Coolpix S210

About CBS Interactive

Copyright © 2013 CBS Interactive Limited. All rights reserved.