The new DJI Mavic 4 Pro was released today and everybody is hyped about what this 2-pound bird can do for you.
Is it going to be the 360-degree rotating gimbal for infinity shoots that we used to do on land—the first upgrade that we are going to abuse?

Or maybe the 6K 60 FPS video quality? There’s so much to talk about this drone and what it will do for me in the next few years… Mostly because this drone will force me to become a better cinematographer.
The Colorful Truth
Why?
Because it will force me to learn about color grading. If you buy the 512 GB Creator version, you can choose to record in 10-bit color 4:2:2 H.264 ALL INTRA at 1200 MBPS, of course in D-LOG. And if you plan to use that file my friend, you HAVE to know how to color grade it. Not how to slap a LUT on it. Color grade it. Because spending $4,649.00 on a drone and not using it at 100% looks a little… dumb, isn’t it?

This means diving into the rabbit hole of color science, understanding the difference between hue, saturation, and luminance adjustments. It means getting familiar with scopes—those intimidating waveforms, RGB parades, and vectorscopes that professionals use.

And let’s not kid ourselves—your first attempts will look like a toddler got hold of your color wheels. Mine certainly did. But just imagine the satisfaction when you nail that cinematic look that makes your viewers ask, “Wait, this was shot on a drone?”
Distance Makes the Heart Grow Fonder
We also are going to have a 41-km transmission. Did the battery of the drone give enough juice for 41 km? Anyhow, if I’m getting 41 km of transmission, then probably I’m getting 100% signal at 500 meters in an urban environment full of interference.
Let’s be honest—most of us will never fly our drones 41 kilometers away.

Not just because it’s probably illegal wherever you’re flying, but because at that distance, your beautiful drone looks like a particularly ambitious mosquito in the sky. But what this range really translates to is rock-solid connectivity when you’re capturing that tricky shot flying through a canyon or between buildings. No more heart-stopping transmission warnings when you least need them!
Rotation Nation
We are having the magic rotational gimbal that makes 360 shots and can look upward to 70 degrees (Hey that’s 10 more degrees than the $199 DJI Neo, and it just costs $4,449 more!). I bet that we can shoot really cool takes… the problem is that we need to tell stories. So I will have to get WAY better writing scripts… So I won’t abuse the rotating shot (as it happened when I discovered the 360 roll on my Ronin RS3). Or abusing slow motions, as any owner of a camera that records over 60 fps could tell.
Remember the first time you flew a drone? How every shot was just “look at this from above!” That’s exactly what will happen with the rotational gimbal. For the first month, every video you make will feature at least three 360-degree spins—guaranteed.
Your friends will start getting motion sickness from your social media posts. Then, hopefully, you’ll start asking yourself, “Does this shot actually add anything to my story?” And that’s when the real progress begins.
Safety Dance
Dear pilots, DJI is putting in our hands (except if you are in India or Saudi Arabia, for any reason that I still don’t know) one of the best technologies for civil usage. Stupid-proof omnidirectional sensors that can see in the darkness (or almost darkness, 0.1 lux is your typical moonlight night, so, pretty dark for me!).

So this is flying under the moon WITH sensors on

Of course, the $2,699 price tag for the basic version of the drone (H.264/265 Standard videos with a maximum bitrate of 180 MBPS and no H.264 ALL INTRA at all, ugh)

This price can and will be a filter for getting this drone. And of course, this drone is directed to users that can afford it and probably will get it to work with it. But also a lot of the public that can afford it will buy it.
These omnidirectional sensors are the drone equivalent of those luxury car commercials where the vehicle automatically brakes before hitting something. Impressive? Absolutely. Should you rely on them entirely? Only if you enjoy the expensive sound of carbon fiber meeting concrete at high velocity. These sensors are your co-pilot, not your replacement. The number of “My Mavic 4 crashed even though it has obstacle avoidance!” forum posts coming in the next year will be astronomical—don’t be one of them.

The Million Dollar Question
And here I ask…
Will the Mavic 4 Pro change my life as a drone pilot?

What I am seeing right now is that if you or I buy this drone right now, the effect it can have in our lives will probably make us lazy. Lazy regarding safety, because if you start just trusting your sensors and the sensors fail (yes, they can do that, too) you will crash.
Think of this drone like if you just start doing videos with your iPhone and someone gives you as a gift an Arri Alexa. That’s a camera that needs a crew to operate it. It can do great things, but you need to be trained for that.

Like learning about color. About composition. About storytelling and scriptwriting. About knowing what you want to make the spectator feel.
The Real Change Begins With You
And here’s the “sad” part.
If I learn about composition, storytelling, scriptwriting, and knowing what you want your spectator to feel… Everything that I plan, write, shoot, colorgrade and edit will be WAY better.

So, what about if you give yourself the marvelous gift of a Mavic 4 Pro Creator Edition… but also the gift of learning new skills so you use it and unlock its full potential?
Because here’s what really separates the hobbyist videos from the professional productions—it’s rarely the gear. We’ve all seen breathtaking footage shot on entry-level drones by skilled operators, and we’ve all watched cringe-worthy videos shot on top-tier equipment by people who thought buying the drone was enough.
The Mavic 4 Pro won’t make you a better drone pilot or filmmaker overnight. But the challenge of living up to its capabilities might. That beautiful piece of flying technology is both a tool and a dare—DJI is essentially saying, “Here’s something amazing. Can you do it justice?”

So yes, the Mavic 4 Pro will change my life as a drone pilot—not because of what it can do, but because of what it will push me to learn. And in that way, perhaps its most valuable feature isn’t listed in any spec sheet.

The true question isn’t whether you can afford this drone—it’s whether you’re willing to become the pilot it deserves.
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