Olympus's 12MP budget compact (FE-4000 rebadge) — 26-105mm equiv 4x zoom, 2.7in LCD, xD/microSD, 2009.
The X-925 was the Japanese-market name for the Olympus FE-4000, a 2009 budget compact from the entry-level FE line; a near-identical X-920 variant shared the same manual. Plenty of UK stock circulates under the X-925 badge, which is how sellers list it. It arrived at the tail end of Olympus's xD-card era, sold in a range of bright colours.
Specifications centre on a 12-megapixel 1/2.33-inch CCD behind a 4x zoom covering a 26-105mm equivalent range at f/2.6-5.9 — an unusually wide 26mm starting point for the class. There is a 2.7-inch LCD, ISO 100-1600, i-Auto scene selection and AF tracking. Storage is xD-Picture Card plus microSD via Olympus's MASD-1 adapter, with power from a rechargeable LI-42B lithium-ion battery.
This is a straightforward point-and-shoot with no manual exposure control, aimed at casual and first-time users. The wide 26mm end makes it handier for interiors and group shots than most budget rivals of its day, and the slim body slips into any pocket, though the slow telephoto aperture limits low-light reach.
When buying used, favour examples with a charger and card included: LI-42B batteries and chargers remain cheap and common, but xD-Picture Cards are long discontinued, so the MASD-1 microSD adapter is the practical route. Check the LCD for scratches (there is no viewfinder), confirm the zoom extends smoothly, and expect typical small-CCD colour rendering.