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Obsbot Tiny 2 Review

This tiny 4K webcam is your faithful follower

4.5
Outstanding
By Will Greenwald
July 16, 2024

The Bottom Line

A top choice for premium webcams, the Obsbot Tiny 2 combines a quality 4K sensor and high-end tracking features in a fully adjustable, truly small design.

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Pros

  • Seriously compact
  • Mechanical pan and tilt controls
  • Powerful AI tracking with multiple modes
  • Hands-free control with gesture and voice commands
  • Excellent 4K video quality
  • Includes a carrying case

Cons

  • Expensive
  • Average microphone quality

Obsbot Tiny 2 Specs

Resolution 4K
Field of View 85.5 degrees
Microphone
Windows Hello

The $329 Obsbot Tiny 2 webcam manages to fit a ton of functionality into an exceptionally small package. It offers multiple AI-based tracking modes, mechanical pan and tilt movements, and gesture and voice control. Its 4K video quality is top-notch, too, while the bundled software supports up to four Obsbot cameras at once. You pay a premium for all these features, but the Tiny 2's ability to handle nearly any recording or streaming task earns it our emphatic Editors' Choice award. It serves as a versatile alternative to the $299.99 Razer Kiyo Pro Ultra, another Editors' Choice winner that can produce more artistic results.


Design: High-End Hardware

The Obsbot Tiny 2 is indeed tiny, measuring just 2.4 by 1.9 by 1.7 inches (HWD). It has two components: A gimbal-mounted camera module attaches to a blocky base with a magnetic bottom and a USB-C port on the back. This design allows for a full range of pivot and tilt, which is very impressive considering the webcam is significantly smaller than the fixed $199.99 Logitech MX Brio (1.7 by 3.9 by 1.4 inches).

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Obsbot Tiny 2 front
(Credit: Will Greenwald)

A wide status LED runs along the front edge of the gimbal. It glows green when it's on and turns blue when it's actively tracking a subject. There’s no indicator that the camera is actively recording or streaming because it’s effectively always on when it’s connected and not specifically turned off. Even if you’re not doing anything with it, the webcam will watch and even follow you around if it’s set to do so. There’s no physical privacy shutter, either, but you can set the camera to sleep mode through the Obsbot Center software. Doing so points the camera straight down at the base, deactivates the gimbal, and turns off the status LED.

Obsbot Tiny 2 side
(Credit: Will Greenwald)

The Obsbot Tiny 2 uses a 1/1.5-inch CMOS sensor with an effective resolution of 50MP. Most other webcam sensors are far smaller, at around 1/2.8-inch, though the Razer Kiyo Pro Ultra has a larger one (1/1.2-inch). The more surface area that a camera sensor has per pixel, the better it can pick up light and minimize noise. The camera seems to use pixel binning (combining pixels on a sensor to increase surface area) like many smartphones since it captures only up to 4K30 or 1080p60 despite its 50MP resolution. That's a good thing, however, since it generally leads to better low-light performance. Otherwise, the webcam has an f/1.9 lens with an 85.5-degree field of view, while the gimbal has a controllable range of motion (140 degrees in either direction horizontally and between 30 and -70 degrees vertically).

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The box includes a small metal clip with a wide, flat jaw on a hinge. The hinge has strong tension and can attach securely to most monitors and laptops. Instead of a screw mount, the clip has a flat metal square that the magnetized camera base attaches to quite firmly. The square also sits on a hinged arm, enabling you to tilt the camera up and down, though this seems unnecessary given the gimbal. A quarter-inch screw mount is on the bottom of the hinge if you want it to attach a conventional tripod.

Obsbot Tiny 2 accessories
(Credit: Will Greenwald)

The bundled hard-shell zip-up case has space to store the camera and the monitor clip, along with the included USB-C-to-USB-C cable and USB-A-to-USB-C adapter.


Software: Smart Tracking and Voice Control

The lens, sensor, and gimbal are all impressive, but it's the webcam's smart features that put it above competitors. The Obsbot Central software (available for Windows and macOS) enables a host of tracking, AI focus, and control features.

Most impressive is the mechanical pan and tilt tracking. You can set the Tiny 2 to automatically keep you in the frame, for instance, while various AI tracking modes can specifically frame your head and shoulders, upper body, lower body, or everything from the neck down. This is a useful selection for everything from showing off a prop to demonstrating dance moves. Four additional tracking modes respectively keep groups in the frame, focus on a whiteboard, follow your hands, and show a vertically flipped and geometrically corrected view of your desk (similar to the Show mode on the Logitech MX Brio). Otherwise, you can manually control the gimbal and zoom, set three specific focus presets, and configure zone-based tracking to follow objects only in a certain area.

I found the Tiny 2’s person-based tracking to work incredibly well. The camera had no issue following me as I moved around my apartment, keeping the shot framed correctly based on whether I wanted my face, upper body, or lower body in view. Hand tracking worked fairly well, too, but was less responsive. I didn't have a large group of people or a whiteboard at my disposal in my apartment, so I couldn’t test the other tracking modes.

To operate the webcam, you can go directly through the Obsbot Center software or use a combination of gesture and voice controls. Gesture controls are just a set of simple hand gestures that are separate from the hand-tracking mode: You can hold your open hand up to toggle human tracking, hold up a hand with your thumb and forefinger out to make the camera zoom in to that depth, or use both hands in that position to dynamically zoom based on where they are. The tracking lock functioned reliably, but the zoom gestures didn't.

Obsbot Tiny 2 software
(Credit: Obsbot/PCMag)

Voice controls are available, too. You can tell the Tiny 2 to wake up or go to sleep by respectively saying “Hi, Tiny” and “Sleep, Tiny.” Other commands toggle human tracking, zoom in and out, and switch among your three preset focus positions. All the voice commands worked flawlessly, but know that the webcam’s microphone is always on and listening if you enable this functionality.

Standard webcam picture adjustments are also available via the Obsbot Center, including automatic and manual exposure, focus, and white balance settings, along with an HDR capture toggle. You can apply several software filters through the app, too, such as an Nvidia-powered bokeh effect that blurs the background behind the subject and a beautification option that alters how your face looks. These features aren't especially useful; the artificial bokeh is overly subtle and limited compared with the AI background removal you can set up through Nvidia’s broadcast SDK, and the retouching filter looks downright unsettling (at least on my face).

Obsbot Tiny2 face retouch
AI retouching is still creepy. (Credit: Obsbot/PCMag)

The Obsbot Central software supports up to four cameras from the company at once, connected either via USB or Wi-Fi (for the $499 Tail Air). You can switch among connected cameras in the app and output the combined feed as a virtual webcam device. This is a separate video feed that your computer recognizes as its own webcam, which shows the view from the active camera after any video processing or filters you apply in the Obsbot Central app. This is a requirement for using the software filters. You can skip the virtual webcam setup if you want the direct feed from the Tiny 2 and prefer to make tweaks later in your workflow. The AI tracking features are hardware-based, so you don't need to go through the virtual webcam setup to retain that functionality for third-party software.


Image and Audio Quality: Detailed 4K Video, Fine Mics

The Tiny 2's video quality is excellent. Test recordings at 4K in a well-lit room look sharp, have proper exposure, and provide sufficient saturation. (Captures even preserve fine details like the hairs of my beard.) The autofocus system works even faster than person tracking, with the camera keeping a lock on me as I move further away from it. That aspect is important because the f/1.9 lens can capture a bit of optical bokeh and make subjects pop out nicely from the background. The Razer Kiyo Pro Ultra's f/1.7 lens creates an even stronger bokeh effect, though the f/1.9 lens on the Tiny 2 makes for a slightly more forgiving plane of focus.

Obsbot Tiny 2 Full-Light Shot
Full-light test shot (Credit: Will Greenwald)

Test captures in low light also look very strong. Details soften just a touch, but my face is still very crisp with the light from just my monitor and two soft, indirect light strips around the room. I can even make out the stitching on the shoulder of my t-shirt, which is impressive under these conditions. A predictable amount of noise shows up in the background, making it only slightly fuzzier than the bokeh effects from the lens.

Obsbot Tiny 2 Low-Light Shot
Low-light test shot (Credit: Will Greenwald)

The built-in microphone on the Tiny 2 handles audio capture and voice commands. It works fine but isn't very impressive. Test recordings sound clear despite audible room noise and a slightly distant vocal presentation. I've yet to encounter a built-in webcam mic that sounds as good as or better than a dedicated headset or microphone, but this one is at least serviceable.


Verdict: A Small, Premium Webcam With AI Tricks

The Obsbot Tiny 2 is seriously impressive for its size. Its AI-powered tracking enables more capture options than any other model I've tested, while support for both voice and hand gestures makes it simple to control directly. Fantastic 4K video quality and powerful companion software further help it earn our Editors’ Choice award for high-end webcams. That said, if you have a specific vision for what you want to capture and don’t mind manual tweaks, the Editors' Choice-winning Razer Kiyo Pro Ultra is a better bet thanks to its bigger sensor, wider lens, and brighter aperture.

Obsbot Tiny 2
4.5
Editors' Choice
Pros
  • Seriously compact
  • Mechanical pan and tilt controls
  • Powerful AI tracking with multiple modes
  • Hands-free control with gesture and voice commands
  • Excellent 4K video quality
  • Includes a carrying case
View More
Cons
  • Expensive
  • Average microphone quality
The Bottom Line

A top choice for premium webcams, the Obsbot Tiny 2 combines a quality 4K sensor and high-end tracking features in a fully adjustable, truly small design.

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About Will Greenwald

Lead Analyst, Consumer Electronics

I’ve been PCMag’s home entertainment expert for over 10 years, covering both TVs and everything you might want to connect to them. I’ve reviewed more than a thousand different consumer electronics products including headphones, speakers, TVs, and every major game system and VR headset of the last decade. I’m an ISF-certified TV calibrator and a THX-certified home theater professional, and I’m here to help you understand 4K, HDR, Dolby Vision, Dolby Atmos, and even 8K (and to reassure you that you don’t need to worry about 8K at all for at least a few more years).

Read Will's full bio

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