GFX 50S IIvs Hasselblad 907X & CFV 100Cvs Z7 II

GearFrame · Updated March 2026

Fujifilm GFX 50S II Fujifilm GFX 50S II (2021) From £2999 Best for Studio & portrait specialists View GFX 50S II
VS
Hasselblad Hasselblad 907X & CFV 100C Hasselblad Hasselblad 907X & CFV 100C (2023) From £8999 Best for Collectors, fine art & V-system users View Hasselblad 907X & CFV 100C
VS
Nikon Z7 II Nikon Z7 II (2020) From £2699 Best for Landscape & studio / high-resolution View Z7 II

Which should you buy?

Studio & Portrait Specialists — GFX 50S II (2021): Medium format quality at the most accessible price ever — 51MP detail and tonal richness no APS-C or full-frame body can replicate.

Collectors, Fine Art & V-System Users — Hasselblad 907X & CFV 100C (2023): An engineering icon — the 907X + CFV 100C bridges Hasselblad V lenses from 1957 with a 100MP digital back in a form that is unmistakably Hasselblad.

Landscape & Studio / High-Resolution — Z7 II (2020): The Z7 II is a landscape and studio camera first, everything else second. 45.7MP with weather sealing and dual card slots is a compelling package. If you need resolution, it delivers. If you don't, the Z6 II is the smarter buy.

↓ Full specifications below

GFX 50S II (2021)

  • You want to experience medium format without a five-figure investment
  • You shoot landscape, architecture, or portraits where resolution and tonal depth matter
  • You're in the Fujifilm ecosystem and want to step up to a larger sensor

Hasselblad 907X & CFV 100C (2023)

  • You already own Hasselblad V-System lenses and want to bring them into the digital age
  • You want a unique camera that produces world-class images and starts conversations
  • You shoot studio or fine art where nothing but the absolute best will do

Z7 II (2020)

  • Landscape photographers who print large or need to crop significantly
  • Studio and commercial photographers requiring maximum resolution
  • Architecture photographers where detail is non-negotiable
  • Fine-art photographers who shoot primarily from a tripod

Quick take: The hasselblad 907x & cfv 100c has the highest resolution at 100mp; the z7 ii is the most affordable; only the gfx 50s ii, z7 ii are weather sealed. Scroll down for the full spec breakdown.

Full specifications

Specification GFX 50S II (2021)Hasselblad 907X & CFV 100C (2023)Z7 II (2020)
Price £2,999 £8,999 £2,699
Sensor 51.4MP Medium Format GFX 44×33mm BSI CMOS 100MP medium-format BSI CMOS (43.8 × 32.9mm) 45.7MP Full-Frame BSI CMOS
Resolution 51.4MP 100.0MP 45.7MP
Video 4K/30p (cropped) None 4K/60p, 4K/30p (oversampled), 1080p/120p slow-motion
Autofocus Phase-detect, 425 points Manual focus (V-system lenses) / contrast AF (XCD) Phase-detect, 493 points, Eye AF, subject tracking
Stabilisation 5-axis IBIS, 6.5 stops None 5-axis IBIS, 5 stops (up to 6 stops with VR lenses)
Burst Rate 3fps 2.7fps 10fps mechanical, 10fps electronic
Battery Life ~440 shots (CIPA) 350 shots (CIPA) ~420 shots (CIPA)
Weight 900g body only 1100g (body + back) 705g (body, battery, card)
Dimensions 150.0 × 104.2 × 87.2mm 97.0 × 97.0 × 63.0mm (body only) 134.0 × 100.5 × 69.5mm
Weather Sealed Yes No Yes
Viewfinder EVF, 3.69M dots, 0.77× magnification External EVF sold separately EVF, 3.69M dots, 0.80× magnification
Screen 3.2" tilting touchscreen 2.36" rear LCD on 907X + 3.0" on CFV 100C 3.2" tilting touchscreen, 2.1M dots
Mount Fujifilm G-mount (medium format) Hasselblad V-mount (+ XCD adapter) Nikon Z-mount
Memory Cards Dual SD UHS-II slots Single CFexpress Type B + 1TB internal SSD Dual card: 1× CFexpress Type B / XQD + 1× SD UHS-II
Connectivity USB-C, Bluetooth, Wi-Fi USB-C 3.2, Wi-Fi, Bluetooth USB-C (USB 3.2 Gen 2), Wi-Fi, Bluetooth
⚡ Compare specs side by side GFX 50S II prices → Hasselblad 907X & CFV 100C prices → Z7 II prices →

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