Dual-Camera Setup Pushes Beyond Typical Pocket Gimbals
Leaked promo images and certification photos point to the Insta360 Luna Ultra taking a significant step up from traditional pocket gimbal cameras. Instead of a single sensor, the device reportedly uses a dual camera setup built around a 1‑inch primary sensor and a dedicated 3x telephoto lens. The main camera is said to feature an f/1.8 aperture, while the telephoto unit delivers around 6x “lossless” zoom and up to 12x hybrid zoom, edging the Luna Ultra closer to a compact mirrorless-style rig than a basic vlogging stick. This combination aims to give creators both shallow‑depth wide shots and tighter perspectives without resorting to digital crops. In a segment where most rivals still rely on one small sensor, the Luna Ultra’s imaging pipeline looks designed to attract users who care about cinematic flexibility as much as portability.

Leica Telephoto Lens Signals a Premium Optical Play
One of the most intriguing parts of the leak is the claim that the Luna Ultra’s dedicated 3x telephoto lens has been developed in collaboration with Leica. That Leica telephoto lens branding, if confirmed, would be a strong signal that Insta360 wants to compete on more than just stabilization and resolution. Leica’s involvement typically implies careful optical design, color science input, and tighter control over contrast and micro‑detail, all of which matter more at longer focal lengths where flaws are easier to spot. For action shooters and solo filmmakers, a stabilized 70mm‑equivalent perspective with higher‑end glass could make the Luna Ultra especially useful for compressing backgrounds, isolating subjects and capturing more dramatic B‑roll. This partnership positions Insta360 as a serious optical player in a market where many compact cameras still treat telephoto lenses as an afterthought.
Creator-Focused Design: Detachable OLED Grip and Pro Video Specs
Beyond optics, the leaked hardware design suggests Insta360 is targeting demanding creators rather than casual vloggers. Renders show a detachable front grip that magnetically separates to become a wireless remote control, complete with a 2‑inch OLED touchscreen, joystick, zoom rocker and dedicated record button. Paired with a full three‑axis mechanical gimbal, this setup could make it far easier for solo shooters to frame themselves, adjust angles and trigger recording from a distance without juggling their phone. On the imaging side, reports mention 6K video at 50fps, 4K at 120fps, 10‑bit i‑Log and Dolby Vision, plus 32‑bit audio recording at 48kHz with support for Insta360’s wireless mics. Taken together, these action camera specs push the Luna Ultra toward a pocket cinema device that happens to offer gimbal‑class stabilization out of the box.
Pricing Leaks and Competitive Positioning in the Premium Action Camera Market
Leaked pricing suggests Insta360 is comfortable placing the Luna Ultra firmly in the premium tier. The standard version is tipped to land around USD 780 (approx. RM3,690), while a larger bundle package could reach about USD 950 (approx. RM4,500). At those levels, the Luna Ultra is not just competing with rival pocket gimbal lines; it is edging into territory normally occupied by entry‑level mirrorless bodies and high‑end compact shooters. That makes its value proposition crucial: buyers will judge the Leica telephoto lens, 1‑inch sensor, advanced codecs and detachable OLED controller against interchangeable‑lens flexibility and larger batteries elsewhere. For creators who prioritize extreme portability, integrated gimbal stabilization and an all‑in‑one shooting kit, the Luna Ultra could justify its price. But it will likely have to deliver noticeable real‑world gains over both smartphones and more affordable action cameras to gain widespread traction.
