Look at the quality of those images of the ground in that video. Those blades are whirring around at super-high rates to provide lift in the Martian atmosphere and taking 30 pictures per second, but in each exposure you can clearly see the shadow of the blades with very little blurring. And with ambient solar brightness quite a bit lower than Earth's "full sunlight", too. Those are quality cameras.
Only a factor of 2.3 lower. Sunlight is extremely bright. Full sunlight on Mars is much brighter than a cloudy day on Earth and an order of magnitude brighter than, say, an office or bedroom on Earth
The first image, from the Perseverance rover's MastCam-Z, is at least as much "true color" as any ordinary camera. (That is, the precise color might be slightly off due to differences between the camera's sensitivity and your monitor's spectrum, but it should be pretty close.)
The video from Ingenuity itself is taken by a black-and-white camera and has no color information.
When you're sending stuff to other planets the cost of what you're sending is usually a trivial part of the cost of the mission. So long as it's off the shelf and not heavier you send the best there is.