Rode is the workhorse production-audio brand for indie and prosumer video production. Their VideoMic series (on-camera shotgun mics), Wireless GO series (compact wireless lavaliers), and NTG series (boom-mountable shotguns) are deployed across more indie and prosumer productions than any competitor. Pricing is mid-range, build quality is solid, audio output is consistent.
Why audio matters more than operators realize. Audiences forgive imperfect video far more readily than imperfect audio. A scene shot on a Sony A7 IV with the camera's built-in mic sounds amateurish; the same scene with a Rode VideoMic NTG plus boom operator sounds professional. The Rode kit is what gets indie productions to "professional-sounding" without the budget for Sennheiser or Schoeps high-end mics.
What to actually buy. Wireless GO II or Wireless Pro for performer lavaliers (clip on, transmit to camera or recorder; the most flexible adult-production audio tool). VideoMic NTG for boom-mounted on-set audio. NTG3 or NTG5 for higher-quality boom work on serious productions. Avoid the cheaper VideoMicro tier — the savings do not justify the audio compromise.
Limitations. Rode's top-tier mics do not match Sennheiser's or Schoeps' high-end performance; for broadcast or feature-film tier audio, the premium brands are different tools. For everything below that, Rode is competitive and often the right choice.
Bottom line. Default audio brand for indie and prosumer adult production. See Sennheiser for the premium tier and our audio guide for the broader audio approach.