Canon will add 4K 120fps video recording capability to Canon R6 III as well as Canon R7 Mark II in 2025. According to the latest rumors, Canon is testing out the Canon R7 Mark II camera body prototypes, here is what surfaced over the web a while ago. “Despite the tech. designed to maintain DR and low-light performance, the sensor readout speed is impressively fast. With the Digic accelerator, it supports 4K at 120 FPS, but cropping happens in HQ mode. However, is that when you enable pixel binning, you can record 4K at 120 FPS without any cropping.”
One thing, if the above is true then the Canon R7 Mark II, without a doubt a video beast, even Sony FX30 does crop at 4k 120fps.
Stay tuned we will update you as soon as we get any new information
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Using pixel binning on APC to get 120 fps is not a video beast.
Video beast is having full pixel readout over-sampled to 4k 120 fps.
Pixel binning is way worse than normal readout/over-sampled.
The only camera that may be a beast is R6III if it can do 4k 120 fps no pixel binning and no crop like R3.
Question how does R3 does the 4k 120 ?
https://www.newsshooter.com/2021/09/14/canon-eos-r3-24-1mp-6k-raw-internal-advanced-af-modes/
The EOS R3 can record 6K RAW (up to 59.94fps), oversampled 4K up to 59.94fps (this oversampling is done from 6K), and pixel binned 4K up to 119.88fps.
The 6K DCI RAW is done in 12-bit CRM or Canon RAW (Light). The RAW recordings can only be done to the CFexpress card. You can record 6K RAW while simultaneously recording to both cards in MP4, providing a fail-safe backup of vital footage
The 4K 120p is not oversampled, but you can shoot in full-frame without a crop.
The R3 is also the first camera in the EOS R series not to feature video recording limitations in most shooting modes. You can record internally in regular frame rates for as long as you like until either the battery or card runs out. Canon’s press release states ‘It’s now possible to record up to six hours of regular video or 1.5 hours at high 119.88/100p frame rates*.’