Not one respondent made any radical request.

The suggestions were all small tweaks and basics like improvements to battery life.

“It’s an iconic design with no superfluous features.

An overhead view of the Fujifilm X100V camera.

Claudio Schwarz / Unsplash

The design and operation are refreshingly simple, especially compared to the Sony lineup.

It’s nostalgic while still being highly functional.

It’s the perfect size and weightit encourages you to pick it up.

Full frontal view of someone holding a Fujifilm X100V.

Reyazul Haque / Unsplash

“Mark Condon, a photographer, and the CEO and founder ofShotkit, told Lifewire via email.

Rumors point to a big year, with updates expected forfavorites like the X-Pro3and the almost-too-popularX100V.

Fujifilm’s first X100 appeared in 2010.

It was extremely flawed but a hit, nevertheless.

It’s nostalgic while still being highly functional.

It’s the perfect size and weightit encourages you to pick it up.

Its specs are good, it does everything you would expect, and it does it well.

But it’s the balance of features that makes it so good.

As mentioned, it’s small but has a big sensor.

It uses Fujifilm’s Film Simulations, which mimic the characteristics of real and imagined films from the past.

Then there are the controls.

This makes shooting immediate and intuitive.

Finally, there’s the viewfinder.

But there are a few things that could be tweaked.

Those are modest requests.

Here are a few more.

This was repeated everywhere I asked.

This is great news for current owners, as they won’t have to upgrade.