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Christian Osipov
Christian Osipov

Buy Moto G Phone


A headphone jack sits on the top edge of the phone, while the bottom edge houses a USB-C charging port and speaker. A combo SIM and microSD slot is the only port on the left, while a volume rocker and textured power button are on the right. The buttons are easy to identify by touch, but you might have trouble reaching them if you have small hands.




buy moto g phone


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The phone's durability is on par with other similarly priced models. Its plastic back and chassis are likely to handle a drop without much damage, but we can't say the same for its strengthened glass panel. An IP52 rating means it should handle rain, splashes, and sweat without a problem, but likely won't survive a drop in the pool or sink.


Low-light photos are on par with those from other phones in this price range. Many of our test shots lack depth and show muted colors. We noticed inconsistent blurring in the foreground, some edge noise, and lens flare in most of our test shots. Motorola's Night Vision mode improves their overall vibrancy and reduces the noise levels, but the photos still lack a natural depth of field.


While Samsung has extended its OS upgrade period to three years on nearly all of its affordable phones, Motorola has yet to follow suit. Instead, you get one OS upgrade with the Moto G Power, along with two years of security updates.


Motorola's G series of phones has established over the years that a cheap smartphone doesn't need to skimp on features. The Moto G Pure is a stark reminder that cheap smartphones occasionally still do.


With the Moto G Pure, Motorola delivers a very inexpensive smartphone that could appeal to people who want to pay as little as possible for their next handset. But the compromises are too steep, negating even the areas where the Moto G Pure does deliver.


Our Moto G Pure review finds some areas where the new addition to Motorola's G Series is able to distinguish itself. But they're far outnumbered by the trade-offs made to keep this phone's cost so low.


The Moto G Pure also happens to undercut the prices of other phones in the affordable Moto G Series. It's $90 less than the 64GB version of the Moto G Power (2021) and even $40 cheaper than the 32GB version of that phone. You can save $140 by opting for the Moto G Pure over the Moto G Stylus (2021).


Motorola packed a 4,000 mAh into the Moto G Pure, which isn't as beefy as the power packs found in other G Series phones. But the Pure still lasted a very long time on our battery test, which involves continuous surfing over cellular until the phone runs out of power. The Moto G Pure's time of 11 hours, 52 minutes over LTE isn't as lengthy as the epic 14 hours the Moto G Power can last, but it's well ahead of the average for smartphones. It even beats out flagships like the iPhone 13, which lasted an impressive 11 hours and 42 minutes on our test.


Moto G Pure design: The Moto G Pure may be inexpensive, but that doesn't mean it looks cheap. Oh, when you hold the phone in your hand, there's no mistaking the plastic chassis housing the device. But the Deep Indigo colorway is pretty striking and the textured back, which feels somewhat grainy to the touch, makes the Moto G Pure easy to grip.


Moto G Pure performance: The MediaTek Helio G25 powering the Moto G Pure is simply not up to the task. Even the most stripped-down budget phones should be able to launch apps with relative ease, but when you tap an app on the Moto G Pure's screen, there's a noticeable lag before it's ready to use. This is particularly noticeable when it came time to launch the camera app, where I noticed a lengthy pause before the G Pure's camera was ready to take a shot. You can lose once-in-a-lifetime moments in these delays, and I really think it's unacceptable, low price or not.


Our benchmark test results for the Moto G Pure bear out this lackluster performance. On Geekbench 5, which measures overall performance, the Moto G Pure tallied single- and multicore scores of 133 and 481, respectively. The OnePlus Nord N200, a Snapdragon 480 5G-powered phone that costs only $80 more than the Pure, puts those results to shame with respective scores of 508 and 1,602.


Moto G Pure camera: Dual lens cameras are now pretty standard, even on cheaper phones. But the second lens on the Moto G Pure is not what you think it would be. Instead of an ultrawide angle lens to accompany the main camera, Motorola has opted for a depth sensor to improve portraits. That means a 2MP sensor joins the 13MP wide angle lens on the back of the Moto G Pure.


If your photo needs tend to be pretty conventional, the photos shot by the Moto G Pure are good enough. The main camera turned in a pretty balanced shot of this bowl of apples, capturing the greens and reds accurately, while also getting some of the details on the wrinkled skin of an older apple. You don't really get that same balance in a similar photo shot by the OnePlus Nord N10 5G, the cheapest smartphone I have on hand. Light streaming in from a nearby window over-exposed the shot dulling the colors of the apples on the left.


But that was the only instance where the Moto G Pure held its own in camera testing. When I took a shot of a college football game, Motorola's phone couldn't contend with the shadows from the setting sun, losing all the details in the crowd around me. The Nord N10 didn't have that same issue, keeping a consistent color tone throughout while still reflecting the shadows creeping over the field.


By the way, you had better hope you only need to take photos with the Moto G Pure when there's plenty of light. There's no night mode on this phone, and the lower the lighting, the more noise can creep into the picture.


What about that depth sensor that's supposed to help the Moto G Pure take better portrait shots? It's a mixed bag in my testing. My friend Jason looks sharp enough in this image, but the Moto G Pure decided that his wife was part of the background and blurred her. The Nord N10 doesn't make that mistake (though, to be honest, the Nord N10 takes a very minimal hand when it comes to background blurs). Perhaps asking for a portrait shot featuring two people was too much for a budget phone, but it does speak to the Pure's limitations.


Moto G Pure charging speed: It's a good thing that the battery on the Moto G Pure lasts such a long time, because recharging it takes some time, too. The phone supports 10W wired charging, which is fairly standard on Motorola's G series devices, but still pretty slow.


Then again, it's not like this phone is built to last. The Moto G Pure ships with Android 11 and is only guaranteed one Android update, plus two years of security updates. That single update will be Android 12, which is already available on Google's Pixel phones and rolling out to other Android devices shortly. Unboxing a Moto G Pure is not unlike opening a fortune cookie with a slip of paper that reads "You will soon be buying a new phone."


You simply can't do that with the Moto G Pure. Setting aside the lack of 5G, the phone's minimal Android support and pokey performance mean you're going to be in search of an upgrade in a couple years, optimistically. Why not spend a little more on a fully featured phone up front that you'll be able to hold on to longer.


Philip Michaels is a Managing Editor at Tom's Guide. He's been covering personal technology since 1999 and was in the building when Steve Jobs showed off the iPhone for the first time. He's been evaluating smartphones since that first iPhone debuted in 2007, and he's been following phone carriers and smartphone plans since 2015. He has strong opinions about Apple, the Oakland Athletics, old movies and proper butchery techniques. Follow him at @PhilipMichaels."}; var triggerHydrate = function() window.sliceComponents.authorBio.hydrate(data, componentContainer); var triggerScriptLoadThenHydrate = function() if (window.sliceComponents.authorBio === undefined) var script = document.createElement('script'); script.src = ' -9-5/authorBio.js'; script.async = true; script.id = 'vanilla-slice-authorBio-component-script'; script.onload = () => window.sliceComponents.authorBio = authorBio; triggerHydrate(); ; document.head.append(script); else triggerHydrate(); if (window.lazyObserveElement) window.lazyObserveElement(componentContainer, triggerScriptLoadThenHydrate, 1500); else console.log('Could not lazy load slice JS for authorBio') } }).catch(err => console.log('Hydration Script has failed for authorBio Slice', err)); }).catch(err => console.log('Externals script failed to load', err));Philip MichaelsSocial Links NavigationPhilip Michaels is a Managing Editor at Tom's Guide. He's been covering personal technology since 1999 and was in the building when Steve Jobs showed off the iPhone for the first time. He's been evaluating smartphones since that first iPhone debuted in 2007, and he's been following phone carriers and smartphone plans since 2015. He has strong opinions about Apple, the Oakland Athletics, old movies and proper butchery techniques. Follow him at @PhilipMichaels.


Motorola is a brand name that has been around forever, despite some restructuring a while back. In the pre-iPhone days, Motorola was well-known for its Razr flip phone, and these days, Motorola has a slew of Android smartphones in its catalog, with several in the more affordable price range.


The Motorola Edge Plus (2022) is the company's latest smartphone that aims to counter the likes of Google Pixel 6 and the Galaxy S22 with flagship specs and a price to match. The Edge Plus (2022) is fitted with vanguard hardware inside, but has a rather bland external appearance that hasn't been updated much since the Motorola Edge (2021). Upgrades include the Snapdragon 8 Gen 1, the latest and arguably most advanced chipset for Android phones, a 144Hz OLED display, dual 50MP cameras on the back, a 60MP camera for selfies, and support for wireless charging.


With these new flagship-level features, the Motorola Edge Plus (2022) finally feels primed to compete with the likes of the Galaxy S22. Motorola also makes some compromises that I will pinpoint in this article. Here are my observations after spending a few hours with Motorola's first flagship smartphone of 2022.Design 041b061a72


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