I formulated some time ago that after using some Fujifilms X100T + XT1, Leica Q, and Olympus PEN-F*, the ultimate camera or camera system for an enthusiast street photographer is the Fujifilm. I feel terrible about making this conclusion without having tested the very strong contenders, the Ricoh GR(2) and the Lumix LX100 (mark 2).
How can I decide for sure which is the best just like that? Well it's actually very easy. Like everyone, I have drawn and collected a set of premises that I hold true personally. This set of premises changes over time as my situation and my preferences evolve. To ever make anything out of a camera review, you should know about the premises that are hold true. When you have your premises, you can draw logical implications and conclusions. Say Alice says Fuji X100 (the original) is too slow at focusing, and Bob says its AF is just perfect. Alice and Bob can both be correct and perfectly logical at the same time because they must have different set of premises they hold true. (If they shared their premises, one of them must be wrong.)
Anyway, people usually leave out their premises, which is a shame but also very human. Making a comprehensive list of premises would be very technically accurate but perhaps it doesn't make for good English prose. Not to mention, making the list is not easy at all.
But maybe I'll try, consider this a somewhat deconstructed "comparative review". Actually I wrote first the body of text and now am cherry-picking the premises from there as I spot them.
* Street photographer's camera (with lens) is petite and not too heavy
* The camera has to be actually nice to look at. You're not shooting landscapes, architecture or paid models; you're shooting strangers who don't know you. A cute toyish camera that doesn't threaten is worth a lot.
* I most usually prefer silver to black, (if the design is not botched)
* You're telling a story so having it possible to acquire very shallow DOF is not necessary
* Street photography is largely a low-fidelity genre.
* The camera is quiet if not silent to shoot.
* You should be able to comfortably shoot your camera in any kind of weather.
* Ergonomics matter: you should be able to operate and trust your camera without looking
* Having good zone focus capabilities is a must: no matter how amazingly fast your autofocus is in your latest Sony, a prefocused lens is there, faster.
* One-way tilty screen is actually better than the full-on-swiveling screen.
* Direct controls greatly preferred over PASM.
* I like wide angles. I find tight compression very clinical in most street work.
* Right eye dominating, I prefer the rangefinder style viewfinder placement over the traditional SLR style placement.
Now let's apply these premises to the cameras or camera systems.
Handling and ergonomics
This is alone a large reason why Fujifilm dominates. The X100 series fits my hand very well, I don't need any thumbsups or halfcases. Just a wrist strap and I'm good to go. The weight is just right at around ~440-460 grams. The body balances well. The buttons on the X100T are pretty much the best I've used, and I believe the X100F is only better with its added joystick and more buttons.
Leica Q at 660 grams does come pretty close, though. Its design is actually very superb, offering you builtin thumb rest and the weight is manageable. Q is not packed with customizable buttons but if you simplify, it works well.
I also have to hand it to Q, in that when I first read the reviews and looked at sample images (at DPR) they were very lackluster and didn't really cultivate GAS at all. When I went and actually handled Q in my hand, the build quality alone made me pretty convinced that the Q is the real deal. Made me GAS I just had to satisfy 2 months later.
Olympus works but isn't anything particular in any section. It's around the same heft as the Fuji (feeling a bit more dense though) but the buttons are pretty cramped and don't have the best feeling.
Looks
As per my premises, in candid shooting how the camera looks actually matters. It is because you are aiming your device at strangers, you don't want to be cultivating negative reactions towards yourself. If you ask for a quick portrait with a stranger, having a cutesy tiny "film camera" helps you get the response you're hoping for.
A silver Fuji X100 or the Pen-F are sure pretty. The all-black and chunky Leica Q doesn't win here. (The silver Q might be better, but to my eye it's not silvery enough.) So far I also got a very positive reaction to my silver M-P. "Someone's shooting a real camera for change", someone said.
Image quality
Now I'll largely disregard IQ out of the comparison because street shooting is pretty much the most "low-fi" of different genres. The content, the emotion and the story dominate.
Hell, people even crush shadows and add grain to the images just because it can add to the reception of the image. So definitely you don't need high fidelity cameras for street work.
But there is one thing about Leica Q that I have to put on a pedestal. Its lens-sensor-combo is so sharp it gives you cropability like no other (that I shot). There is immense value in taking a casual shot of a street and later finding out there's a very good 1500x1200 crop of the full 6000x4000 image that makes just a wonderful shot. And with Q you can do that crop pretty safely. It'll look wonderful.
Silence of operation
Following the theme of stranger-friendliness you don't want to draw attention to yourself. One doesn't catch the decisive moment with just one carefully timed shot -- even the masters work the scenes and shoot loads.
The very moment I got the X100T in action I instantly developed a deep appreciation towards quiet shutters. X100T is the quietest of them all. Leica Q comes a good second (it also has a leaf shutter but it's louder) and then the Olympus. Olympus has a pleasantly muted focal plane shutter. After a quick trial at a retail store I think the Fuji X-Pro2 has a pleasantly "quiet" shutter as well. Fuji X-T1 is louder, the MP240 very much so.
If I were to switch all my existing gear to go Fuji-only, I'd get the X100F as my main camera simply because of the leaf shutter (and the fact my preferred FL is 35).
Weather sealing
This one goes to Fuji, too. None of my current cameras does WR quite satisfactorily. With Fuji I could be using an X-Pro2 with a WR lens and be quite sure I'm safe. You could do the same with Olympus (have an E-M1 as your rainy-day body) but Olympus has fewer compact WR lenses than Fuji.
IBIS?
Now with Olympus having IBIS and a smaller sensor, is it a good tradeoff against a larger sensor with no IBIS... well I just managed to say how IQ doesn't mean much in street shooting so perhaps I can't say much other than absolutely, an IBIS does help expand your shooting envelope.
Features to help autofocus
Fuji (the X-Trans 2 generation) wasn't very superbly capable with autofocus. (My experience only involves the slow lenses: X100T's builtin one, 35/1.4 and 18/2.) The acquisition works pretty fast but a big theme around my missed shots was that Fuji tended to focus on the background.
While being faster to attain focus, Olympus PEN-F sadly shares this problem.
Leica Q on the other hand seems to nearly always prefer what's nearest in the focus rectangle. The amount of keepers I get with Q compared to the X100T is just insane. Q also focuses very quickly in good light -- overall a stellar implementation of CDAF.
But in very dark situations the CDAF of Leica Q (or the PEN-F) will result in duds quite easily: pointlike light sources turn into bokeh balls, and the focusing engine decides that the sharp edge of a bokeh ball is in focus. I believe a hybrid solution like X-Trans 2 Fuji or newer, has way less problems.
Overall autofocus (esp. those systems where you can focus anywhere in the frame) does have its place in street shooting because you can use your wide lens pretty and focus on the subject even though it looks like you point your camera elsewhere. With a DSLR (or Leica M) you have to resort on focus-recompose tricks or zone focusing so yeah, trickier.
Features to help manual focus
Leica M basically dominates the accuracy and ergonomics of manual focus. Leica Q offers a standard mirrorless featureset that is probably implemented better than average. Fuji has a good standard mirrorless feature set, but certain bodies like the X-T3 go the extra length in making sure you're all set for some MF action. I'm talking about the dual view feature where you can see the magnified focus area and the whole frame at the same time to keep your composition and your focus in mind simultaneously. Very good stuff!
Olympus gets the job done but I won't say it's any pleasure to use.
Zone focusing is a big thing, and Fuji is the king here as well. Fuji bodies offer an electronic focus distance scale for all native lenses, which is huge. The fact that Olympus doesn't do this, and all the "exciting" M4/3 lenses don't have a physical distance scale, makes Olympus a poor street shooter.
Leica M lenses (and Q) sport a good focus distance scale. The lenses also are designed for manual focus use from the start, so they're bound to be great. But in zone focusing it's just sometimes difficult to deal with the shallow DOF. With Q it's been hard to get good and sharp results while zone focusing whereas with Fuji X100T I got really good results from the start. Native Fujifilm lenses are fly-by-wire and cannot be reasonably fitted with focusing tabs so Leica has an edge here: with the developing finger feel you'll gain a good sense of what's going to be in focus, if you stick with zone focusing.
Fujifilm also provides a nice hybrid mode: in MF mode with a native Fujinon lens you can still autofocus by using the AF-L button. I never experimented with that mode of shooting much but it could be huge. All in all, the more I shoot Leica M, the more I start to see how Fujifilm truly understands and appreciates the street shooter and their needs.
Olympus makes a handful of lenses that have a physical focus distance scales, but the lenses themselves aren't necessarily what I call very beautifully rendering. YMMV -- if you love the 17/1.8 then you're all set for good zone focusing.
Exposure handling
When EVFs started to be a thing, I instantly fell in love with the idea. I've shot through EVFs for 3+ years now. I like it so much that I can keep my exposure within bounds like that.
Now all the cameras have a good evaluative metering, which all behave pretty much the same. The exception is the Leica M, where you probably want to prefer the classical center-weighted metering to keep battery usage and shutter delay at minimum. This is why I give the evaluative metering a win in this instance. If you shoot certain styles of street shots with no time to react to changing light, the evaluative metering is a good friend. Leica sensors don't like overexposure and will clip easily, so if you just manually expose or let it to chance, you run a decent risk of severely under- or overexposing.
Olympus is the easiest in this manner, having a stop of leeway in the highlights. Fuji X100T comes close, although I have to say I didn't shoot raw with the Fuji that much.
Lenses size-wise
Olympus and M4/3 have the compactest lenses, but are the most compact lenses the best performers? Sadly, no. If you can forgo the zone focusing altogether, then Panasonic's offerings are the best you can do with rendering and size in careful balance. Just shame about the distance scales.
Fuji offers some compact lenses, some larger ones. The funny thing is that Leica M glass tends to be around the same size if not smaller. If you want to go the ultimate in size (having ZF capabilities), go Leica M.
If you really prefer the 35mm equivalent, then a Fuji X100 series body as your main camera makes a lot of sense and it's a tiny lens, not to mention all the other niceties of the body.
Lens character
I'm not sure I should write about this here. I'll say just this: I don't mind the deep DOF of M4/3 at all, it's just that the (Olympus) M4/3 lenses I've used render OOF areas somewhat uglily. It doesn't always blur out but turns into a haze where you have difficulty determining what's going on. For comparison, with Fuji X100T I often closed the lens to f/5.6 and still got a nice gradual transition to OOF so it's just the Olympus 17/1.8 that doesn't appeal to me in the slightest.
The larger Olympus PRO lenses have a good performance, I understand. But they're so large it makes little sense for me.
Panasonic's M43 lenses seem to perform much better, but the problem is the lack of the focus distance scale. If only Olympus (or Panasonic) offered a Fuji-like electronic scale on the screen, the positively tiny Panasonic 14, the 20, or even the 12-32 could have so much life as a zone focus glass.
And the fullest of character of course goes to Leica M and some of the good legacy lenses you can have for "peanuts".
Small but helpful things: flash
Fuji X100T and the leaf shutter and the builtin flash makes all the difference. Some street photogs don't understandably use flash, others swear by it. The small builtin flash may not have the best guide numbers out there but it provides the little push that goes the longest way reducing your post-processing times. And X100T's TTL metering for flash is wonderful -- among the main reasons Ken Rockwell named the X100T "the best camera ever". Like the Apple crowd puts it, "it just works".
Fuji XT1 and Olympus come second because they ship with an external flash that doesn't need own power. But the problem is that you have to remember to keep that unit with you. There's nothing like a builtin flash that's just there for you. Also the XT1's TTL metering wasn't as perfect as the X100T's.
Leica Q and M come last because there's just no good TTL flash support or ecosystem for them, so you're probably going to go manual on that one. Not that it's a bad or a difficult thing, but still.
In conclusion
All in all, Fujifilm as a system or as a compact camera (the X100 series) is the best street shooter's tool I can hope. The title that is traditionally given to Leica, perhaps because of historical reasons, I felt like drilling into the reasons why I felt Fuji was so good.
A year ago I got myself into Olympus for the sole reason of it being perhaps the best street shooter's tool, but sadly the features of the body and the lenses didn't lend themselves to allow me to announce it the winner. And they're so close, if they just did something with the focus distance scales.
But yeah, it's not like Leica is garbage. Far from it! If you want that film like performance and the best tonality in a compact form, you can't go wrong with the Q. The cropability is a big aspect and of course the manual focus features are very good with both the Q and especially with the M.
You may have noticed that some of the Fuji's wins are based on the fact that I don't master everything yet. If I practiced enough and learned to accurately meter the light (both available light and flash) then Leica wouldn't be any worse than Fuji on those departments. That's something I simply have to practice, it's nothing more complex than that. I have already practiced the aspects of prefocus, so why not practice premetering as well. The same goes for zone focus too: the larger sensor is very unforgiving, but it can be improved by developing that finger-feel and practicing.
But anyway, also considering price, weight, WR, AF capabilities on top of the things, Fujifilm has things well in the bag. What am I personally going to do, it remains to be seen.
edit: added two more premises that hold true for me
edit 2: added and rewrote some premises
* (I bought myself since then the Leica M-P 240 with the 35 Summicron ASPH, that they say is pretty much the king of street photography. I haven't put the camera in street action just yet, because I haven't had the chance. But even before acquiring this object of desire I kind of knew it will not be as good an overall performer as the Fujifilm. But we'll see, come summer.)
How can I decide for sure which is the best just like that? Well it's actually very easy. Like everyone, I have drawn and collected a set of premises that I hold true personally. This set of premises changes over time as my situation and my preferences evolve. To ever make anything out of a camera review, you should know about the premises that are hold true. When you have your premises, you can draw logical implications and conclusions. Say Alice says Fuji X100 (the original) is too slow at focusing, and Bob says its AF is just perfect. Alice and Bob can both be correct and perfectly logical at the same time because they must have different set of premises they hold true. (If they shared their premises, one of them must be wrong.)
Anyway, people usually leave out their premises, which is a shame but also very human. Making a comprehensive list of premises would be very technically accurate but perhaps it doesn't make for good English prose. Not to mention, making the list is not easy at all.
But maybe I'll try, consider this a somewhat deconstructed "comparative review". Actually I wrote first the body of text and now am cherry-picking the premises from there as I spot them.
* Street photographer's camera (with lens) is petite and not too heavy
* The camera has to be actually nice to look at. You're not shooting landscapes, architecture or paid models; you're shooting strangers who don't know you. A cute toyish camera that doesn't threaten is worth a lot.
* I most usually prefer silver to black, (if the design is not botched)
* You're telling a story so having it possible to acquire very shallow DOF is not necessary
* Street photography is largely a low-fidelity genre.
* The camera is quiet if not silent to shoot.
* You should be able to comfortably shoot your camera in any kind of weather.
* Ergonomics matter: you should be able to operate and trust your camera without looking
* Having good zone focus capabilities is a must: no matter how amazingly fast your autofocus is in your latest Sony, a prefocused lens is there, faster.
* One-way tilty screen is actually better than the full-on-swiveling screen.
* Direct controls greatly preferred over PASM.
* I like wide angles. I find tight compression very clinical in most street work.
* Right eye dominating, I prefer the rangefinder style viewfinder placement over the traditional SLR style placement.
Now let's apply these premises to the cameras or camera systems.
Handling and ergonomics
This is alone a large reason why Fujifilm dominates. The X100 series fits my hand very well, I don't need any thumbsups or halfcases. Just a wrist strap and I'm good to go. The weight is just right at around ~440-460 grams. The body balances well. The buttons on the X100T are pretty much the best I've used, and I believe the X100F is only better with its added joystick and more buttons.
Leica Q at 660 grams does come pretty close, though. Its design is actually very superb, offering you builtin thumb rest and the weight is manageable. Q is not packed with customizable buttons but if you simplify, it works well.
I also have to hand it to Q, in that when I first read the reviews and looked at sample images (at DPR) they were very lackluster and didn't really cultivate GAS at all. When I went and actually handled Q in my hand, the build quality alone made me pretty convinced that the Q is the real deal. Made me GAS I just had to satisfy 2 months later.
Olympus works but isn't anything particular in any section. It's around the same heft as the Fuji (feeling a bit more dense though) but the buttons are pretty cramped and don't have the best feeling.
Looks
As per my premises, in candid shooting how the camera looks actually matters. It is because you are aiming your device at strangers, you don't want to be cultivating negative reactions towards yourself. If you ask for a quick portrait with a stranger, having a cutesy tiny "film camera" helps you get the response you're hoping for.
A silver Fuji X100 or the Pen-F are sure pretty. The all-black and chunky Leica Q doesn't win here. (The silver Q might be better, but to my eye it's not silvery enough.) So far I also got a very positive reaction to my silver M-P. "Someone's shooting a real camera for change", someone said.
Image quality
Now I'll largely disregard IQ out of the comparison because street shooting is pretty much the most "low-fi" of different genres. The content, the emotion and the story dominate.
Hell, people even crush shadows and add grain to the images just because it can add to the reception of the image. So definitely you don't need high fidelity cameras for street work.
But there is one thing about Leica Q that I have to put on a pedestal. Its lens-sensor-combo is so sharp it gives you cropability like no other (that I shot). There is immense value in taking a casual shot of a street and later finding out there's a very good 1500x1200 crop of the full 6000x4000 image that makes just a wonderful shot. And with Q you can do that crop pretty safely. It'll look wonderful.
Silence of operation
Following the theme of stranger-friendliness you don't want to draw attention to yourself. One doesn't catch the decisive moment with just one carefully timed shot -- even the masters work the scenes and shoot loads.
The very moment I got the X100T in action I instantly developed a deep appreciation towards quiet shutters. X100T is the quietest of them all. Leica Q comes a good second (it also has a leaf shutter but it's louder) and then the Olympus. Olympus has a pleasantly muted focal plane shutter. After a quick trial at a retail store I think the Fuji X-Pro2 has a pleasantly "quiet" shutter as well. Fuji X-T1 is louder, the MP240 very much so.
If I were to switch all my existing gear to go Fuji-only, I'd get the X100F as my main camera simply because of the leaf shutter (and the fact my preferred FL is 35).
Weather sealing
This one goes to Fuji, too. None of my current cameras does WR quite satisfactorily. With Fuji I could be using an X-Pro2 with a WR lens and be quite sure I'm safe. You could do the same with Olympus (have an E-M1 as your rainy-day body) but Olympus has fewer compact WR lenses than Fuji.
IBIS?
Now with Olympus having IBIS and a smaller sensor, is it a good tradeoff against a larger sensor with no IBIS... well I just managed to say how IQ doesn't mean much in street shooting so perhaps I can't say much other than absolutely, an IBIS does help expand your shooting envelope.
Features to help autofocus
Fuji (the X-Trans 2 generation) wasn't very superbly capable with autofocus. (My experience only involves the slow lenses: X100T's builtin one, 35/1.4 and 18/2.) The acquisition works pretty fast but a big theme around my missed shots was that Fuji tended to focus on the background.
While being faster to attain focus, Olympus PEN-F sadly shares this problem.
Leica Q on the other hand seems to nearly always prefer what's nearest in the focus rectangle. The amount of keepers I get with Q compared to the X100T is just insane. Q also focuses very quickly in good light -- overall a stellar implementation of CDAF.
But in very dark situations the CDAF of Leica Q (or the PEN-F) will result in duds quite easily: pointlike light sources turn into bokeh balls, and the focusing engine decides that the sharp edge of a bokeh ball is in focus. I believe a hybrid solution like X-Trans 2 Fuji or newer, has way less problems.
Overall autofocus (esp. those systems where you can focus anywhere in the frame) does have its place in street shooting because you can use your wide lens pretty and focus on the subject even though it looks like you point your camera elsewhere. With a DSLR (or Leica M) you have to resort on focus-recompose tricks or zone focusing so yeah, trickier.
Features to help manual focus
Leica M basically dominates the accuracy and ergonomics of manual focus. Leica Q offers a standard mirrorless featureset that is probably implemented better than average. Fuji has a good standard mirrorless feature set, but certain bodies like the X-T3 go the extra length in making sure you're all set for some MF action. I'm talking about the dual view feature where you can see the magnified focus area and the whole frame at the same time to keep your composition and your focus in mind simultaneously. Very good stuff!
Olympus gets the job done but I won't say it's any pleasure to use.
Zone focusing is a big thing, and Fuji is the king here as well. Fuji bodies offer an electronic focus distance scale for all native lenses, which is huge. The fact that Olympus doesn't do this, and all the "exciting" M4/3 lenses don't have a physical distance scale, makes Olympus a poor street shooter.
Leica M lenses (and Q) sport a good focus distance scale. The lenses also are designed for manual focus use from the start, so they're bound to be great. But in zone focusing it's just sometimes difficult to deal with the shallow DOF. With Q it's been hard to get good and sharp results while zone focusing whereas with Fuji X100T I got really good results from the start. Native Fujifilm lenses are fly-by-wire and cannot be reasonably fitted with focusing tabs so Leica has an edge here: with the developing finger feel you'll gain a good sense of what's going to be in focus, if you stick with zone focusing.
Fujifilm also provides a nice hybrid mode: in MF mode with a native Fujinon lens you can still autofocus by using the AF-L button. I never experimented with that mode of shooting much but it could be huge. All in all, the more I shoot Leica M, the more I start to see how Fujifilm truly understands and appreciates the street shooter and their needs.
Olympus makes a handful of lenses that have a physical focus distance scales, but the lenses themselves aren't necessarily what I call very beautifully rendering. YMMV -- if you love the 17/1.8 then you're all set for good zone focusing.
Exposure handling
When EVFs started to be a thing, I instantly fell in love with the idea. I've shot through EVFs for 3+ years now. I like it so much that I can keep my exposure within bounds like that.
Now all the cameras have a good evaluative metering, which all behave pretty much the same. The exception is the Leica M, where you probably want to prefer the classical center-weighted metering to keep battery usage and shutter delay at minimum. This is why I give the evaluative metering a win in this instance. If you shoot certain styles of street shots with no time to react to changing light, the evaluative metering is a good friend. Leica sensors don't like overexposure and will clip easily, so if you just manually expose or let it to chance, you run a decent risk of severely under- or overexposing.
Olympus is the easiest in this manner, having a stop of leeway in the highlights. Fuji X100T comes close, although I have to say I didn't shoot raw with the Fuji that much.
Lenses size-wise
Olympus and M4/3 have the compactest lenses, but are the most compact lenses the best performers? Sadly, no. If you can forgo the zone focusing altogether, then Panasonic's offerings are the best you can do with rendering and size in careful balance. Just shame about the distance scales.
Fuji offers some compact lenses, some larger ones. The funny thing is that Leica M glass tends to be around the same size if not smaller. If you want to go the ultimate in size (having ZF capabilities), go Leica M.
If you really prefer the 35mm equivalent, then a Fuji X100 series body as your main camera makes a lot of sense and it's a tiny lens, not to mention all the other niceties of the body.
Lens character
I'm not sure I should write about this here. I'll say just this: I don't mind the deep DOF of M4/3 at all, it's just that the (Olympus) M4/3 lenses I've used render OOF areas somewhat uglily. It doesn't always blur out but turns into a haze where you have difficulty determining what's going on. For comparison, with Fuji X100T I often closed the lens to f/5.6 and still got a nice gradual transition to OOF so it's just the Olympus 17/1.8 that doesn't appeal to me in the slightest.
The larger Olympus PRO lenses have a good performance, I understand. But they're so large it makes little sense for me.
Panasonic's M43 lenses seem to perform much better, but the problem is the lack of the focus distance scale. If only Olympus (or Panasonic) offered a Fuji-like electronic scale on the screen, the positively tiny Panasonic 14, the 20, or even the 12-32 could have so much life as a zone focus glass.
And the fullest of character of course goes to Leica M and some of the good legacy lenses you can have for "peanuts".
Small but helpful things: flash
Fuji X100T and the leaf shutter and the builtin flash makes all the difference. Some street photogs don't understandably use flash, others swear by it. The small builtin flash may not have the best guide numbers out there but it provides the little push that goes the longest way reducing your post-processing times. And X100T's TTL metering for flash is wonderful -- among the main reasons Ken Rockwell named the X100T "the best camera ever". Like the Apple crowd puts it, "it just works".
Fuji XT1 and Olympus come second because they ship with an external flash that doesn't need own power. But the problem is that you have to remember to keep that unit with you. There's nothing like a builtin flash that's just there for you. Also the XT1's TTL metering wasn't as perfect as the X100T's.
Leica Q and M come last because there's just no good TTL flash support or ecosystem for them, so you're probably going to go manual on that one. Not that it's a bad or a difficult thing, but still.
In conclusion
All in all, Fujifilm as a system or as a compact camera (the X100 series) is the best street shooter's tool I can hope. The title that is traditionally given to Leica, perhaps because of historical reasons, I felt like drilling into the reasons why I felt Fuji was so good.
A year ago I got myself into Olympus for the sole reason of it being perhaps the best street shooter's tool, but sadly the features of the body and the lenses didn't lend themselves to allow me to announce it the winner. And they're so close, if they just did something with the focus distance scales.
But yeah, it's not like Leica is garbage. Far from it! If you want that film like performance and the best tonality in a compact form, you can't go wrong with the Q. The cropability is a big aspect and of course the manual focus features are very good with both the Q and especially with the M.
You may have noticed that some of the Fuji's wins are based on the fact that I don't master everything yet. If I practiced enough and learned to accurately meter the light (both available light and flash) then Leica wouldn't be any worse than Fuji on those departments. That's something I simply have to practice, it's nothing more complex than that. I have already practiced the aspects of prefocus, so why not practice premetering as well. The same goes for zone focus too: the larger sensor is very unforgiving, but it can be improved by developing that finger-feel and practicing.
But anyway, also considering price, weight, WR, AF capabilities on top of the things, Fujifilm has things well in the bag. What am I personally going to do, it remains to be seen.
edit: added two more premises that hold true for me
edit 2: added and rewrote some premises
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