

It doesn’t have stereo microphones or a tripod like the C922, but it features a built-in LED ring light for illuminating your face even in dark settings. It can capture video at 1080p30 or 720p60, and features an 81.6-degree field of view. The Razer Kiyo (Opens in a new window) is another $100 webcam. The stereo microphones pick up my voice well enough to hear, but it's rife with echoes and sounds distant.

The C922 captures a nicely exposed picture, though facial details look a bit soft. You can also fold the clip closed and use a built-in tripod hole with the included tripod, or any standard tripod. The monitor clip is a flat slab of black plastic on a hinge, with soft-touch rubber on the underside and on a small foot that flips down to help stabilize the webcam against the back of your monitor. The stereo microphones are a welcome touch, letting you capture mono or stereo audio, and generally getting a nice, full sound. The lens is tiny, but that’s standard for webcams. The C922 is a small but nicely built, measuring just under four inches wide and just over an inch tall. All of the non-name-brand webcams we tested don’t have a tripod, but they do feature monitor clips similar in design to the C922’s. The C922 also comes with a desktop tripod, so you can use it on a flat surface, as well as on the top of your monitor. It features autofocus and light correction, a 78-degree field of view, and stereo microphones. The Logitech C922 (Opens in a new window) is a $100 model that can record 1080p video at 30fps and 720p at 60fps. We’ll start with two name-brand webcams to establish a baseline.

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