Nikon's entry 35mm AF compact — fixed 34mm f/4.5 lens, full automation, AA power, aka Fun•Touch 2, 1993.
The Nikon AF200 was an entry-level 35mm autofocus compact introduced in 1993 as the replacement for the budget RF10. In North America it was sold as the Fun•Touch 2. Manufactured in China to keep costs down, it anchored the bottom of Nikon's point-and-shoot range beneath the zoom compacts of the era.
It carries a fixed wide-angle 34mm f/4.5 lens of three elements, with autofocus and fully automatic exposure — the camera sets aperture and shutter speed itself with no user override. A built-in flash covers low light, and film loading, advance and rewind are motorised. Power comes from two AA batteries, good for roughly 18 rolls, and the body weighs about 200g.
As a shooter it is a pure point-and-press machine: no zoom, no exposure control, just a moderately wide fixed lens and automation. That simplicity appeals to film newcomers and students who want an inexpensive, AA-powered compact for everyday snapshots, though the modest f/4.5 lens is no match for the earlier premium L35AF line.
AA batteries make ownership easy, but check the compartment for corrosion from cells left inside. Confirm the shutter fires, the flash charges and the motor advances and rewinds film, and inspect the film-door seals. Sellers list it as both 'AF 200' and 'Fun Touch 2'; do not confuse it with the separate Nikon Zoom 200 AF zoom compact.