If you love film but want something unusual in your camera bag, this list rounds up five of the weirdest 35mm cameras—from quad-lens 3D rigs to swing-lens panoramics and a point-and-shoot that looks like it was designed by a Sith Lord. Prices are typical ranges as of September 2025 and will vary by condition and market.
1) Nishika N8000 — Quad-Lens 3D “Wigglegram” Classic

Why it’s weird: Four lenses fire simultaneously, exposing four half-frame images across two 35mm frames. Print labs once turned these into lenticular 3D prints; today, shooters scan the four frames and compile a 3D GIF/wigglegram for that parallax “pop.”
History in a blink: Launched in 1989 with heavy direct-marketing hype; original MSRP about $200. Nishika’s tactics (and later bankruptcy) are part of its infamous lore.
Typical price (2025): roughly $90–$160 for bodies/kits in working condition on the open market. eBay
How it shoots: Fixed shutter (~1/60) with simple aperture settings; plenty of light helps. For best 3D GIFs, keep subjects 3–10 ft away and include foreground/background layers.
Nerd note: The Nishika followed the Nimslo (early-1980s, 4-lens 35mm 3D made by Timex in Scotland), which established consumer lenticular 3D. Wikipedia
Example Image:

2) Lomography ActionSampler — Four Shots in One Frame

Why it’s weird: A featherweight four-lens toy camera that slices roughly one second into four sequential mini-frames on a single 35mm exposure—like a flipbook baked right into the negative.
Typical price (2025): commonly around $34–$40 new from photo retailers. Nelson Photo & Video
How it shoots: Fixed everything—go out in bright light, get close, and shoot motion (skaters, dogs, cyclists). No flash.
Why you’ll love it: The ActionSampler turns everyday scenes into kinetic, comic-strip moments.
Example Image:

3) Yashica/Kyocera Samurai X3.0 — The Camcorder-Shaped Half-Frame SLR

Why it’s weird: Looks like a late-’80s handycam, but it’s a half-frame 35mm SLR (vertical 18×24 mm frames). You get 72 shots on a 36-exp roll—twice the fun, half the grain (sort of). A cult design that’s surprisingly capable. Analog Cafe
Typical price (2025): about $95–$150 for clean, working examples. eBay
How it shoots: Quiet, motorized, and very point-and-shoot-ish. Embrace the vertical frame or rotate in post. Perfect for street and day-in-the-life rolls.
4) Konica AiBORG (1991) — The “Darth Vader” Zoom

Why it’s weird: Biomech styling, soft rubbery grips, a swollen LCD, and an autofocus system Konica marketed as “moving frame AF.” The nickname “Darth Vader camera” stuck—for obvious reasons. mike eckman dot comcamera-wiki.org
Lens/Specs: 35–105 mm f/3.5–8.5 zoom in a very… memorable body. Camera Legend
Typical price (2025): all over the map by condition—guides show $20–$60 historically, but recent sales and clean copies often fetch around $100+. collectiblend.comeBay
How it shoots: Treat it like a premium 1990s P&S with a strong zoom. Expect attention whenever you pull it out—this thing’s a conversation piece.
5) Horizon 202 — Swing-Lens Panoramic Drama

Why it’s weird: Instead of a wide lens, the lens swings during exposure, projecting a curved image across the film for those signature panoramic sweeps (think 24×58 mm). It’s mechanical theater every time you press the shutter. cameraville
Typical price (2025): around $200 for user-grade kits when you can find them. bluemooncamera.com
How it shoots: Keep the camera level (a bubble level helps). Avoid subjects too close to the swinging lens to reduce distortion. Rewarding once you learn its rhythm.
Buying Tips (2025)
- Price sanity check: Browse a few recent listings to gauge the going rate (condition matters more than model).
- Function first: For unusual mechanisms (swing-lens, quad-lens shutters), ask for sample shots or a short test video.
- Light leaks & foam: Budget for minor service (light-seals, battery doors).
- Scan workflow: For 3D/Nishika or ActionSampler, plan your scanning/post process before you shoot—your edits are half the magic.
FAQ
What 35mm camera makes a 3D GIF?
The Nishika N8000 (and earlier Nimslo 3D) shoot four slightly offset frames at once. Scan and stack them to create a “wigglegram” GIF with real depth.
Is the Konica AiBORG actually good?
It’s notorious for looks and ergonomics, but the zoom can be sharp. If you want a daily carry, maybe not. If you want weird that works, it delivers.
Why not just a normal panoramic lens?
Swing-lens cameras like the Horizon 202 render motion and lines differently—sweeping, elastic panoramas that static wides can’t mimic.
Sources & Further Reading
- Nishika N8000 background & original price (1989), marketing saga. EMULSIVEchris owens photography
- Nimslo history & 4-lens 3D lineage. Wikipedia
- Current market snapshots: Nishika N8000, Yashica Samurai pricing. eBay+1
- Lomography ActionSampler overview & retail pricing. B&H Photo VideoNelson Photo & Video
- Konica AiBORG specs/history & “Darth Vader” nickname. mike eckman dot comcamera-wiki.org
- Horizon 202: swing-lens mechanics & typical used pricing. cameravillebluemooncamera.com