​Sony a6700 Successor: Things Sony MUST Fix

The Sony a6700 is widely praised as one of the best APS-C mirrorless cameras on the market, but after extensive real-world testing, some glaring flaws cannot be ignored. Before Sony designs the follow-up or successor to the Alpha 6700, there are a few frustrating features and design flaws they absolutely must change. In this video, we are bypassing the generic spec-sheet praise and looking at the honest reality of shooting with the Sony a6700 hybrid camera for street photography and video. While the autofocus performance and AI tracking features are incredible, the actual shooting experience reveals several corner-cutting choices by Sony engineering. ​From ergonomics that leave you with a "flying pinky" to an outdated electronic viewfinder (EVF) that feels decades old, we break down the definitive wishlist for the Sony a6700 successor body. ​We dive deep into: ​Camera Ergonomics: Why compact size hurts handling for mature hands and how a taller body design fixes it. ​The "Soulless Sensor" Myth: Why photographers blame a camera's silicon for a lack of artistic soul, and why that mindset is fundamentally lazy. ​The Technical Dealbreakers: The missing physical focus joystick, the clunky menu layout compared to premium interfaces like the Hasselblad X2D, and the risk of a single SD card slot for professional workflows. ​Field Issues: Sensor exposure during lens swaps, passive cooling limits, and rolling shutter jello effects. ​Are you an alpha series shooter? What is the one major issue you want to see fixed in the next generation of Sony crop-sensor cameras? Let me know in the comments below! ​#Sonya6700 #SonyAlpha #StreetPhotography #CameraReview #MirrorlessCamera #SonyPhotography