If You Want to be the sharpest-looking person on your Friday morning Teams call, you might want to consider investing in the brilliant Insta360 Link 2 motorized webcam. This second-generation ultrahigh-resolution 4K webcam is capable of doing brilliant things to the quality of your video calls.
For starters, the follow-up to 2022’s superb Insta360 Link (8/10 WIRED Recommends) remedies the only major complaint WIRED had with the original: its cost. While the Link was $300 on launch, the asking price for the Link 2 is a much more palatable $200, without a significant drop in performance and with a fair few improvements, too.
Same Great Video Quality
Video quality remains almost identical to the original Insta360, and if you own a Link already, it's not enough to warrant an upgrade. Both webcams use a half-inch image sensor supporting video capture up to 4K/30p or 1080/60p, and in my side-by-side comparisons I found very little difference between them. The original Link’s autofocus is slightly more responsive and there are some tiny white balance differences, but overall both offer excellent detail, exposure, and color, producing clear and punchy results in all but the worst lighting conditions. If you want a sharper streaming camera than this, you’re going to have to spend big on a mirrorless camera or similar.
So where are the main improvements over the Link? The noise canceling capabilities of the Link 2 are markedly more effective at reducing background sounds, which will be good news for anyone who works in a bustling office or has a home working setup within earshot of a busy road. It’s particularly effective at isolating voices while dampening down droning noises such as fans, vacuum cleaners, or traffic. If you don’t have the space or budget for a separate USB or XLR microphones in your home studio, the Link 2’s built-in mic does a very capable job.
Follow My Face
The AI-assisted tracking and framing, which keeps the gimbal-mounted camera pointed at human shapes while they move around, is smarter on the Link 2. It now supports tracking for groups rather than just individuals, and as with the older camera, its more than capable of keeping tricky moving subjects in frame or even zooming in to highlight them (depending on your preferred settings).
You can set the camera to track and frame your face, head and shoulders, or full body, and it generally does a great job. If, however, you move out of its field of vision and then return, it struggles to reacquire you automatically. In this case, you can tap the button (circled by a green LED that lights to indicate whether tracking is on or off) to restart tracking, or use the Link 2’s gesture controls to do so from afar. A raised hand, palm facing the camera, toggles tracking on and off. You can also arrange your thumb and forefinger in an upward-pointing L shape, raising or lowering your hand to zoom in and out of the framed image. But, in reality, I found this to be frustratingly spotty and often ignored it entirely.