INSTA 360 X5’s sensor lit up not only a night ride but even the dark recesses of a helmet, perfect for vlogging in the dark. Photographs by JHD for DAILY TRIBUNE
TECHTALKS

INSTA360 X5: A night owl’s delight

The X5’s improved sensors and PureVideo mode deliver noticeably richer detail, better dynamic range, and smoother tonal transitions.

John Henry Dodson

I did not intend to be impressed with the loaner Insta360 X5, and I expected it to be full of promises and slightly overrated. I strapped it to my motorcycle anyway, rode through Metro Manila, and waited for it to disappoint me.

It didn’t.

Daylight shooting was predictable fare — crisp, clean, the kind of footage that makes you wonder if action camera performance has plateaued. Then night fell, and the X5 began to shine. In PureVideo mode, the camera transformed the neon-lit chaos of Manila into cinematic surroundings.

This wasn’t marketing smoke — this was dual 1/1.28-inch CMOS sensors (144 percent larger than the X4’s 1/2-inch) drawing in light like a moth to a streetlamp, aided by a triple-AI chipset that combines two pro-grade imaging processors with a 5 nm AI core.

Even with a helmet on, this noob rider didn’t vanish into the shadows. Instead of the ghostly blur you’d expect, the X5 painted facial features with texture, depth, and even some flattering contrast. The X4? It would have transformed a rider’s mug into a noise-riddled snowstorm.

On paper, yes, both cameras shoot 8K at 30 fps. But the X5’s improved sensors and PureVideo mode deliver noticeably richer detail, better dynamic range, and smoother tonal transitions.

However, the X5 ups the ante with 5.7K at 60 fps HDR and slow-mo at 4K120, while FlowState stabilization keeps the horizon steady even when your ride doesn’t.

Audio isn’t an afterthought. A built-in wind-guard mic with AI suppression let my motorcycle rants stay intelligible even at edge-of-seat speed.

Call it 360° sorcery: you don’t choose your angle — you capture everything, everywhere. In post, you swipe, tilt, zoom, and drop keyframes. Deep Track 2.0 follows your subject, or InstaFrame spits out a ready-to-share flat version while preserving the 360 capture for storytelling flexibility.

As a journalist, I can imagine that the X5 was built for field use: IP68-rated waterproofing to 15 meters versus the X4’s 10 meters.

Battery life matters on the open road: the X5 tucks away up to 185 minutes in endurance mode, with fast charging to 80 percent in 20 minutes, compared to the X4’s 135 minutes and sluggish recharge.

If you have the money, upgrading from the X4 is not a vanity play; it’s an expansion of possibility.

The X4 was already a game-changer with 8K capture and gimbal-smooth reframe capabilities, but the X5 rewrites the rules with smarter AI, better light sensitivity, rock-solid durability, and creative freedom — all without requiring you to think ahead.

For travelers, moto-vloggers, night riders, and anyone who tells stories in motion and after dark, the X5 isn’t an accessory — it’s a tool — no, make that a weapon — of choice.

The Insta360 X5 is what happens when specs start living up to expectations, not just juke sheets. It smashed them across the street, hopped into my side mirrors, and asked, “Want to go again?”