Nikon's budget 35mm AF compact — fixed 34mm f/4.5 lens, auto flash, motor wind, US name Smile-Taker, 1992.
The Nikon RF10 was a budget 35mm autofocus compact introduced in 1992, derived from the RF/RD Quartz design but stripped of the data back to hit a lower price. It was sold in selected markets only and marketed in the US as the Smile-Taker. Nikon replaced it with the AF200 the following year.
It carries a fixed 34mm f/4.5 Nikon lens with autofocus from 1.2m to infinity and fully automatic exposure. An integral flash provides automatic and fill-in operation, and a built-in motor loads, advances and rewinds the film. The camera is compact and light enough for a jacket pocket, with operation reduced to framing and pressing the shutter.
The RF10 is a no-decisions snapshot camera: moderately wide fixed lens, auto exposure, auto flash. It suits film beginners and students after a cheap, genuinely simple compact, and its plain styling and Smile-Taker branding give it mild curiosity value among collectors of early-1990s point-and-shoots. Image character is modest but serviceable in good light.
Like most motorised compacts it is fully battery-dependent, so confirm it powers on, the flash charges and the wind motor advances film before purchase. Inspect the battery compartment for corrosion and the film-door seals for crumbling foam. Examples labelled Smile-Taker are the same camera under US branding, not a separate model.