GoPro's most exciting mount yet: a drone

Over the years, people have attached GoPro (GPRO) cameras to everything. Thanks to an enormous variety of mounting brackets, they’ve attached this tiny cubical camera to helmets, handlebars, surfboards, skateboards, violin bows, dog collars, ceiling fans, tennis racquets—and a few unusual places, too.

In September, the company introduced the most exciting GoPro mount yet: A drone. It’s called the Karma: $800 for the drone alone, or $1100 with a new GoPro Black 5 camera.

The GoPro Karma takes flight.
The GoPro Karma takes flight.

For about a week, the world of athletes, filmmakers, and gadget freaks were truly excited. The Karma seemed to have a world of groundbreaking features: Arms that fold up. A backpack that holds everything. A remote with a brilliant touchscreen, so you don’t have to use your phone as a screen. A companion app that lets a second person operate the camera while you operate the drone. And a stabilizer that pops out of the drone and attaches to a handheld electronic stick, so that you can get equally steady footage on foot.

The Karma folds up easily into a padded backpack.
The Karma folds up easily into a padded backpack.

And then—the Mavic Pro happened.

Dead on arrival?

That would be the new DJI Mavic Pro: a far smaller folding drone—that’s nonetheless more sophisticated, more powerful, and more intelligent than the Karma. (The Mavic is $750 if you use your phone as a screen; $1,000 with controller.)

The DJI Mavic Pro is a tiny folding drone with amazing features.
The DJI Mavic Pro is a tiny folding drone with amazing features.

You can read my full review here, but here’s the short version: The Mavic flies much longer on a charge than the Karma (27 minutes vs. 19). It can fly much farther from you without losing signal (4 miles vs. a puny 0.6 miles). It can fly faster (40 mph vs. 35). It’s much lighter (1.6 pounds vs. 2.2).

And the Mavic’s intelligence features make the Karma look like a relic from 2014. It has front-facing sensors that prevent collisions. It has down-facing sensors that let it hold position indoors, where GPS is unavailable. (You do not want to fly the Karma indoors.)

And the Mavic has “follow-me” mode. How on earth could GoPro release a drone without “follow me” mode?! Seems that like that would be the single most important feature to the target audience of skiers, skaters, bikers, runners, and other active types. (“That’s a sentiment we’ve heard quite a bit,” acknowledges a rep, hinting that this feature might come to the Karma in a future update.)

Article after article after article after article declared GoPro’s drone to be the loser, a 1.0 product that entered the race just as its rivals were crossing the finish line.

But here’s the thing: Even if the timing of the Karma announcement was a disaster, the drone itself isn’t quite.

A water bug in the sky

The Karma looks like it was designed by people who’d heard of drones, but had never seen one. The concepts are all there—four propellers, a remote, a battery—but they’ve been executed radically differently from previous drones.