Meike isn’t done with the 85mm focal length just yet. Fresh on the heels of its AF 85mm f/1.8 SE II — a compact autofocus portrait prime that launched for E, L, and Z-mount cameras at $229 / £190 — the company is now teasing something considerably more ambitious: an ultra-fast AF 85mm f/1.2 aimed squarely at full-frame mirrorless shooters.
That f/1.2 aperture is the headline here, and it’s a meaningful jump. Where the f/1.8 SE II is built to be light, affordable, and pocketable, an f/1.2 optic sits in an entirely different tier. Roughly 1.17 stops faster than its stablemate, it promises the kind of razor-thin depth of field and creamy background separation that portrait photographers chase — plus a real advantage in dim lighting where every fraction of a stop counts.
Lenses this bright are rarely small. An f/1.2 design demands large-diameter glass and careful optical engineering to tame aberrations wide open, which typically translates into a heftier, pricier package than the modest SE II. Meike hasn’t confirmed how it intends to balance those trade-offs, and the teaser stops short of committing to detailed specifications.
What we do know is that Meike has been steadily building out its autofocus lineup rather than sticking to manual-focus budget glass. The 85mm f/1.2 carries the AF designation, signalling autofocus support — a category where the brand has been sharpening its game, as seen with recent releases like its AF 58mm f/1.2 flagship for APS-C bodies. Pushing an f/1.2 autofocus design onto full-frame is a natural, if bolder, next step.
For context, Meike’s current 85mm shelf already includes a couple of options:
- Meike 85mm f/1.4 II — a full-frame prime available in L, E, and Z mounts
- Meike AF 85mm f/1.8 SE II — the newer full-frame autofocus prime at $229 / £190
Slotting an f/1.2 above both would give Meike a proper three-tier 85mm range, spanning from value-focused to fast-and-serious. That’s an aggressive strategy from a brand that made its name undercutting the majors on price, and it hints at growing confidence in its optical and autofocus chops.
The obvious question is where an f/1.2 Meike would land against the likes of Sony, Nikon, and third parties such as Sigma and Viltrox — both on image quality and on cost. If Meike can deliver a genuinely usable f/1.2 for full-frame at a friendlier price than the first-party heavyweights, it could be a tempting proposition for portrait and event shooters.
For now, this is a teaser rather than a full reveal. Meike hasn’t published a final spec sheet, price, or availability date, so the exact optical formula, weight, and mount options remain to be seen. What’s clear is that the company sees a market for a bright, autofocus 85mm — and it’s willing to reach for f/1.2 to grab it.