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CameraCreatorsMobileTech

GoPro launches Fluid Pro AI gimbal for action cameras, phones, and compact cameras

GoPro introduces the Fluid Pro AI gimbal with 360-degree panning, 320-degree tilt, and a 400g payload for phones, compact cameras, and Hero devices.

By
Shubham Sawarkar
Shubham Sawarkar's avatar
ByShubham Sawarkar
Editor-in-Chief
I’m a tech enthusiast who loves exploring gadgets, trends, and innovations. With certifications in CISCO Routing & Switching and Windows Server Administration, I bring a sharp...
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Sep 24, 2025, 11:56 AM EDT
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GoPro Fluid Pro AI gimbal
Image: GoPro
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GoPro is trying the gimbal thing again — but this time it’s not just for GoPros. The company’s new Fluid Pro AI is a three-axis stabilizer that wears two hats: it’s built to feel native with GoPro action cameras, and it’s also built to carry smartphones and small compact cameras up to roughly 400 grams. That cross-platform flexibility is the headline here: you can snap a Hero13 Black into it one minute, clamp a phone in the next, and keep shooting with the same hardware.

Mechanically, the Fluid Pro AI looks like a grown-up gimbal: full 360-degree panning with up to 320 degrees of tilt, swappable mounting brackets with a clamp for different phone widths, and a built-in LED fill light so you’re not entirely at the mercy of ambient lighting. GoPro also leaned on ergonomics — it’s a handheld unit that’s more about long days of shooting than a pocketable selfie stick.

But what really gives the Fluid Pro AI its name is the little camera module tucked into the gimbal: an AI-powered tracking system that recognizes faces and bodies, listens for a few gestures to start or stop following you, and keeps your subject framed even when you’re moving. It’s the same basic trick Insta360 and DJI have been pushing for the last year — let the gimbal do the framing so you can think less about composition and more about the scene. Connect the gimbal to GoPro’s mobile app and you get additional creative tools — panoramas, time-lapses and the like — plus a manual way to pick who or what the AI should track.

If you’re thinking about battery life — and you should if you shoot all day — GoPro says the Fluid Pro AI’s big internal cell will run for up to 18 hours on a charge in ordinary use. With the AI tracker humming and the LED light turned on, that figure drops to about six hours; still, that’s a meaningful step up from many recent phone-centric gimbals, which generally top out around the 10-hour mark in more conservative testing. There’s also the practicality boost of using the device as a power bank to top up your phone or action cam while you shoot, which is nice when you want to avoid dangling external battery packs.

GoPro Fluid Pro AI gimbal
Image: GoPro

On price and timing: GoPro is positioning the Fluid Pro AI at $229.99 — more than competitors such as the Insta360 Flow 2 Pro and the DJI Osmo Mobile 7 Pro, which sit notably lower in price — and it will land on shelves and GoPro’s site on October 21. That premium is clearly part product engineering and part brand positioning: GoPro wants to sell a single tool to creators who already own GoPros, as well as those who shoot on phones. Whether the extra cash is justified will come down to how much you value the cross-device flexibility, the battery life, and the bundled feature set.

There are trade-offs. The Fluid Pro AI doesn’t pack every nicety found on high-end phone gimbals — there’s no telescoping selfie arm built into the handle and you won’t find legs that pop out as a tripod — so if those specific bits of portability are critical to you, one of the competition’s designs might make more sense. On the other hand, the ability to accept compact point-and-shoots and GoPros without kludgy adapters is genuinely useful: it simplifies a creator’s kit and means you can swap capture formats mid-shoot without changing tools. For filmmakers who mix phones, compacts, and action cams, that’s a real workflow win.

For the would-be buyer who already lives in the GoPro ecosystem, the Fluid Pro AI is a tidy companion product. It extends the Quik app’s tracking and editing features into the real world of handheld capture and folds the kind of battery endurance you want on day-long shoots into a single unit. For phone-first creators, it’s a more expensive option than the alternatives, but not a wildly expensive one — and the promise of better runtime and native app integration might be worth the extra outlay.

Ultimately, GoPro is playing a pragmatic card: rather than trying to out-feature DJI and Insta360 on every technical front, it’s leaning into compatibility and endurance. That’s a smart, if conservative, move for a brand whose name still carries weight among action-sports shooters and adventure-focused creators. If you want one device that can handle a Hero, a phone, or a compact camera without making you reconfigure your life, the Fluid Pro AI is the clearest attempt yet from GoPro to be that device. Shipping begins October 21 at $229.99.


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