There’s a simple, underrated reality about making adventure videos: light matters. You can strap a camera to your helmet, wrist, or surfboard and still end up with dark, grainy footage the moment the sun dips. For years, the workaround has been aftermarket lights, headlamps, or awkwardly mounting a separate torch — until now. GoPro’s new Lit Hero puts a cluster of LEDs right beside the lens so your action cam can carry its own little sun.
The Lit Hero is a compact, entry-level GoPro with an obvious new twist: four bright LEDs in a block next to the lens that can be switched on when the world around you goes dark. The idea is almost embarrassingly simple — instead of balancing a camera and a separate light, the camera itself becomes the light source. GoPro launched the camera for preorder at $269.99 with shipping set to begin on or before October 21, 2025. The company positions it as a small upgrade over its standard Hero, which remains available at a lower price.
Under the hood, there are a couple of meaningful spec bumps compared with the basic Hero: the Lit Hero can shoot 4K at 60fps (up from 4K/30 in the cheaper model) and GoPro quotes run times of about 100 minutes at top quality with the LEDs turned off — battery life will drop when the lights are in use, naturally. The camera weighs 93 grams and remains waterproof to 5 meters (about 16 feet), so it’s aimed squarely at swimmers, snorkelers and anyone who wants rugged, pocketable gear.
GoPro’s sample images and early hands-on coverage make the Lit Hero’s strengths — and limits — pretty clear. Up close, the LEDs are effective: the light will brighten faces and nearby subjects, and GoPro bundles a small diffuser to soften the directness of the beam for friendlier portraits or close-range vlogs. But the light isn’t a long-throw spotlight: it won’t cut through darkness the way a dedicated bike or dive light will. In practice, that makes the Lit Hero best-suited to short-range illumination — think lighting up your buddies around a campfire, grabbing clean face-cams in dim arcades, or reducing noise in night-time POV shots — rather than pushing visibility far down a trail or into deep water.
That’s not a surprise. GoPro previously sold separate light accessories — the Light Mod from a few years back — which were useful but added weight and clutter. The Lit Hero folds that convenience into the camera body itself, trading absolute power for simplicity and integration. For many creators, the question will be whether the convenience outweighs the lower output compared with aftermarket lights.
The camera looks and feels like a petite GoPro: rugged, magnetic mounting points, and the familiar squircle body. GoPro says the LEDs have multiple brightness levels, which helps dial in a tone that isn’t just “blinding flash.” Magnetic mounting and the small footprint mean you can clip it to pockets, mounts, and gear without dealing with a separate light block on top. That makes the Lit Hero an appealing “grab-and-go” camera for social-media creators and casual travelers who want a simpler kit.
If you’re someone who hates carrying extra kit — the kind of person who wants a single, compact device to capture everything from daytime surf clips to late-night hostel shenanigans — the Lit Hero is an attractive option. It’s also a sensible upgrade for users of the basic Hero who want smoother 4K/60 footage and occasional onboard illumination without buying a separate mod.

If your work depends on powerful, long-throw lighting (night mountain biking, cave exploration, professional underwater videography), the Lit Hero is unlikely to replace your larger, purpose-built lights. It’s convenience-first, not power-first.
Preorders are live now through GoPro’s store and other retailers, with the Lit Hero tagged at $269.99 and shipping promised by October 21, 2025. That price places it above the most basic Hero model but well below GoPro’s flagship Black cameras, suggesting it’s meant to sit in a middle ground between bargain portability and premium capability.
This move also speaks to a broader trend: camera makers keep trying to eliminate friction for casual creators. Instead of selling you modular piles of equipment — camera, light, cage, battery pack — companies are packaging convenience into single devices that “just work.” For a huge audience, that’s a smart trade-off. For power users, GoPro’s modular ecosystem and third-party lights will still have their place.
Final thoughts
The Lit Hero doesn’t invent anything radical — we’ve had camera-mounted lights before — but it does something important: it makes low-light shooting less fiddly. For travellers, vloggers and weekend adventurers who want usable footage after sunset without a backpack full of kit, the Lit Hero will likely be an appealing, practical companion. If you need raw lighting power, keep your aftermarket torch. If you want a one-piece, pocketable camera that brightens faces and scenes when daylight fades, this is the first mass-market Hero to seriously promise that convenience.
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