Hasselblad's 100MP compact modular medium format — the 907X 100C, X mount, IBIS, 2024.
The Hasselblad 907X 100C was released in 2024 as the higher-resolution successor to the 907X 50C, pairing the compact 907X body with the CFV 100C digital back and its larger-count sensor. It keeps the modular design that recalls the classic V-system and can share the back with compatible V-system bodies.
The 907X 100C is a mirrorless medium-format camera with a 100-megapixel CMOS sensor in the 44x33mm medium-format size and the Hasselblad X lens mount, and with an adapter it accepts V-system and older lenses. It adds in-body image stabilisation over the 50C, composes on a tilting rear touchscreen with an optional finder, and uses the leaf shutter built into the X-system lenses. It also records video.
It suits studio, portrait and landscape professionals who want very high resolution in the same compact modular form, with the added stabilisation making handheld medium-format shooting more practical. The waist-level style of use and tilting screen continue the classic Hasselblad handling, and the leaf-shutter lenses provide fast flash sync, though the deliberate pace remains unsuited to action.
When buying, check the shutter actuation count, inspect the large sensor for dust and marks, and test the tilting touchscreen for dead pixels and hinge play. Confirm the back-to-body connection, check the IBIS for rattle, the card-door and battery-door latches, and verify the battery and charger are available. As a recent CMOS body there is no CCD-corrosion concern, so focus on sensor cleanliness, firmware version, and the condition of the leaf-shutter lenses.