GoPro has unveiled Mission 1, a new compact action-camera lineup built around a simple pitch: bigger sensors, longer recording times, and fewer excuses for missing the shot. The GoPro Mission 1 lineup includes Mission 1 Pro, Pro ILS, and the standard Mission 1, with the company aiming at filmmakers, content creators, and beginners who want more than a pocket toy.

All three models share a 1-inch, 50-megapixel sensor, a GP3 processor, and a 159-degree lens. That puts GoPro squarely into the premium compact action-camera race, where larger sensors have become the easiest way to promise better low-light performance and more usable detail without turning the device into a brick. The Pro ILS adds support for interchangeable Micro Four Thirds lenses, which is the sort of spec that should make hobbyists grin and casual users quietly back away.

GoPro Mission 1 shooting modes and pro features

The base Mission 1 records 8K video at 30fps, 4K at 120fps, and 1080p at 480fps. The two higher-end models double the frame rates in those same resolutions, giving them the sort of slow-motion flexibility that usually separates creator gear from weekend gear.

GoPro is also pushing HLG-HDR, 10-bit color with GP-Log2, and timecode synchronization for multi-camera shoots. Add four microphones with noise reduction and 32-bit audio recording, and the message is clear: this is not just about crashing down a mountain and hoping for the best.

  • Sensor: 1-inch, 50 MP
  • Processor: GP3
  • Lens: 159 degrees
  • Video: 8K/30fps, 4K/120fps, 1080p/480fps on Mission 1
  • Battery life: more than 5 hours in Full HD, more than 3 hours in 4K

GoPro Mission 1 durability and battery life

Mission 1 and Mission 1 Pro are rated for dives down to 20 meters, which keeps them in familiar action-camera territory rather than trying to cosplay as a diving computer. GoPro says the battery lasts more than 5 hours when recording in Full HD and more than 3 hours in 4K, a useful improvement for creators who are tired of treating batteries like disposable plot devices.

That endurance claim matters because the competition has been moving in the same direction: bigger sensors, better microphones, longer runtimes. DJI and Insta360 have spent the past few product cycles making GoPro justify its premium, so Mission 1 looks like an answer to a market that no longer accepts ”rugged” as the only selling point.

GoPro Mission 1 preorder and release dates

GoPro has not announced prices yet. Preorders start on 21 May, Mission 1 and Mission 1 Pro go on sale worldwide on 28 May, and Mission 1 Pro ILS is due in the third quarter.

If GoPro prices these aggressively, Mission 1 could pressure the rest of the action-camera field. If it doesn’t, the lineup will still be interesting, but more as a spec-sheet flex than a mass-market reset. Either way, the company has made its move; rivals now have to answer with something sharper than a new coat of rubber.

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