Nikon's 1995 entry-level 35mm compact — fixed-focus 29mm f/4.5 lens, DX auto exposure, AA power; aka Fun Touch 4.
The Nikon AF220 was an entry-level 35mm compact introduced in 1995 as the successor to the AF210. In some markets it was sold as the Nikon Fun Touch 4, and a QD variant added date imprinting. It sat at the bottom of Nikon's compact range, built for straightforward snapshots with no user settings to manage.
Despite the AF name, the lens is fixed-focus: a 29mm wide-angle at f/4.5 with a minimum subject distance of 1.3m. Exposure is fully automatic with a fixed 1/125s shutter, metering for DX-coded films from ISO 100 to 400. The built-in flash offers red-eye reduction with a quoted range of 1.3-2.4m at ISO 100. Film loading, wind and rewind are motorised, power comes from two AA batteries, and the body measures 118 x 65 x 42mm at 165g.
This is a true point-and-shoot: the 29mm wide lens and small aperture give generous depth of field that masks the fixed focus in daylight, making it a low-cost way into film photography. Its limits are real — no zoom, no focus control, weak flash reach and a single shutter speed — so it suits casual daylight shooting rather than anything demanding.
On the used market these sell cheaply and survive well thanks to simple mechanics and common AA power. Check that the camera fires and winds with fresh batteries, that the flash charges and discharges, and that the film door closes tight with intact light seals. Nothing works without battery power, and the QD date function on those variants has long exceeded its calendar range.