Konica KD-300 Zoom is best treated as a Konica/Minolta compact whose appeal is the less-common brand look, simple flash snapshots, and a working complete kit. Judge this exact model around its 2001 release context, 3 MP, CCD sensor, 38-76mm equivalent, 2x optical zoom, and SD / MMC setup instead of the brand name alone.
What owners like
People still look for Konica KD-300 Zoom because it gives a real-camera flash workflow, brand-specific color and menus, and a tactile body that feels different from a phone. The useful part is the exact mix of 38-76mm equivalent, 2x optical zoom, SD / MMC, and the model's size when the seller proves the actual unit works.
Common complaints
Common complaints are scarce batteries or chargers, older card formats, sliding-cover wear, scratched screens, and less predictable resale support than Canon or Sony compacts. For Konica KD-300 Zoom, the practical risk is the 2001-era condition: Konica / Konica Minolta compact rechargeable Li-ion battery means the charger, spare battery cost, and whether the pack still holds charge matter; SD / MMC is easier than older formats, but early models may still care about low-capacity cards; and 38-76mm equivalent, 2x optical zoom and lens cover should open cleanly, since tiny pocket cameras are easy to damage in bags.
What to compare
Use Konica KD-200 Zoom, Konica Digital Revio KD-310Z, Canon PowerShot SD10 DIGITAL ELPH, and Canon PowerShot SD100 DIGITAL ELPH as the real comparison set for Konica KD-300 Zoom. Compare pocket size, direct-flash look, charger availability, screen condition, and whether trend pricing is hiding a weak unit; the best buy is usually the listing with clearer working proof and easier accessories, not the one with the most familiar name.
Built from this model's specs plus source-backed community / review / model list owner patterns.