I picked up a Vivitar PN2011 twenty years ago at a Las Cruces thrift shop for two bucks. I was impressed with the sharp pictures that the simple point-and-shoot could produce. I only shot a couple rolls with that camera before I got distracted with all the others I was finding at bargain prices at that time on ebay. The best of the PN2011 pictures came from a Campo Santo in Las Cruces and from a trip to the most southern Chaco outlier on Alamosa Creek.
I turned that original PN2011 into a pinhole camera and never used the panoramic format option. I found another in Albuquerque at about the same price as the first and decided to try it as a panoramic shooter during a walk through the Botanic Garden. The film on this occasion was Kodak Gold 200.
The pictures from this second PN2011 don't seem as sharp to me as the ones I got from the first one, so I may have to look for another.
Switching to panoramic mode changes the view through the finder and narrows the image width on the film with a couple movable panels. The altered view may help a bit with visualizing the panoramic potential of the scene, but not much is gained in camera that can't be achieved by just cropping the full image.