Skip to main content
  1. Home
  2. Computing
  3. Deals

My trusty 1080p webcam is down to just $64 for Prime Day

Add as a preferred source on Google
I'm holding my Logitech C920 1080p webcam in my hands.
John Alexander / Digital Trends / Digital Trends
Best Prime Day Amazon Deals
This story is part of the Digital Trends Prime Day 2026 coverage

The Logitech C920 used to be a sort of gold standard in webcams. A few years ago, needing to do more and more web calls, I got one. It hasn’t left the top of my monitor since that time and I haven’t felt the need to update once yet. I’ve found this webcam to be a trusty and worthwhile part of my computer setup for a long time. It has been awhile, and I never thought I’d be recommending it to others in 2024, but with this early Prime Day deal, bringing it down to $64 from the usual $100 it becomes a super easy buy. To grab your Logitech C920 for $36 off, tap the button below. Otherwise, keep reading to see why I still like this webcam, why I think its still worth it at this price, and the one thing I don’t like about it.

BUY NOW

Why you should buy the Logitech C920

The Logitech C920 was and is an incredible webcam. While it isn’t as bragged about as it once was, let’s refresh your memory. It is a 1080p at 30fps webcam (though, in some situation it will do 720p at 30 instead) that focuses on you automatically and has incredibly simple controls. Setting up and getting a great shot of yourself with the Logitech C920 is very quick and readjustments can be made in real time during meetings without taking a technical timeout mid-meeting.

The video quality still feels incredible. Part of this is due to it being 1080p. It can feel off to say in a 4K (and increasingly 8K) world, but 1080p is still quite excellent for a webcam. The webcam on the laptop at the top of our best laptops list? 1080p, and that’s on the Apple MacBook Air M3, a laptop nobody would dare call less than premium. Oh, and that promised thing that I don’t like about the Logitech C920? The mic. For some reason it has a mic inside and sometimes software will default to its mic instead of my preferred one, or revert to it after updates, but really, it is just a minor inconvenience.

The Logitech C920 is $36 off right now, bringing its price down to $64 from $100. To get yours, just tap the button below. If this isn’t for you, however, and you want something with a built-in webcam, maybe check out these Prime Day laptop deals instead?

BUY NOW

John Alexander
Former Digital Trends Contributor
John Alexander is a former ESL teacher, current writer and internet addict, and lacks the wisdom to know what the future…
New open-weight AI from China is toppling the best of OpenAI and Claude Fable
Moonshot’s 2.8-trillion-parameter Kimi K3 beats Fable 5 and GPT 5.6 Sol in select benchmarks
Art, Drawing, Plant

China's Moonshot AI has launched Kimi K3, a massive 2.8-trillion-parameter model built for coding, research, reasoning, and visual tasks. Moonshot admits K3 still trails Claude Fable 5 and GPT 5.6 Sol overall. Even so, its benchmark results put it surprisingly close to both, and it finishes ahead in several tests.

How close is Kimi K3 to the best closed models?

Read more
Gemini could finally let you choose how friendly it sounds
Finally, you can stop Gemini from sounding like your HR manager
Google Gemini

Google has spent the past few months making Gemini sound more natural, expressive, and conversational. Now, it appears the company is preparing to give users far more control over how the AI speaks.

Code spotted by Android Authority's APK Insights - the latest beta version of the Google app suggests Gemini may soon allow users to customise its voice across four separate parameters: Energy, Formality, Warmth, and Speed. Instead of choosing from a fixed list of personalities, users could tweak these characteristics to create a voice that better suits their preferences.

Read more
ChatGPT will now remind teens to take breaks and give parents more controls
New parental controls include Quiet Hours, Study Mode defaults, and alerts for serious account violations.
chatgpt-teen-safety-features

OpenAI wants to make ChatGPT safer for teens, and the changes go well beyond a simple content filter. In a new update, the company laid out its stance on why teens should have access to AI in the first place, arguing that keeping them away from it entirely would leave them unprepared for one of the defining technologies of their generation.

Nearly 90% of teens already use ChatGPT weekly for learning, research, or getting organized, which is why OpenAI says access needs to come paired with real protections built for their age.

Read more