Olympus's bottom-rung 35mm compact — fixed-focus 34mm f/6.3, 1/100 mechanical shutter, manual wind, AA flash.
The Olympus Shoot & Go was a simple fixed-focus 35mm compact made in the mid-1990s, sitting at the very bottom of the Olympus range below the Trip and Superzoom families. The closely related Shoot & Go R added a red-eye reduction lamp but was otherwise the same camera.
The lens is a fixed-focus 34mm f/6.3 with focus from about 1.2m to infinity, matched to a single-speed 1/100 mechanical shutter. Film speed is set manually to ISO 100/200 or 400, advance and rewind are by hand via a thumbwheel, and the built-in flash runs on two AA batteries. The body measures roughly 125x70x45mm with a built-in strap.
Handling is as basic as film photography gets: wind on, frame through the simple finder, press. That makes it a decent starter or party camera, though the slow f/6.3 lens wants bright light or flash and the fixed shutter speed offers no exposure flexibility beyond the film's latitude.
Its mechanical shutter and manual wind are a used-market advantage: the camera fires with no batteries at all, the AAs feeding only the flash. Check the shutter trips, the wind wheel advances smoothly, the flash charges and fires, and the back-door light seals are intact; avoid hazy or scratched lenses.