Display

Since a smartphone is primarily a large display that you interact with, it's important that manufacturers prioritize including a high quality display. As smartphones advanced we first saw increases to display resolution to improve sharpness, as well as a shift from TN displays to VA or IPS panels in order to improve viewing angle. With specs like resolution reaching a point where there isn't much more improvement to be made, manufacturers have moved on to improving display accuracy. While some have begun to focus on the color accuracy of their mid-range devices, others have not. To evaluate the various aspects of a display we use X-Rite's i1Pro 2 spectrophotometer along with their i1Display Pro colorimeter, and SpectraCal's CalMAN 5 software.

Display - Max Brightness

Display - Black Levels

Display - Contrast Ratio

The Moto G has a good peak brightness, although the black level is higher than most recent devices, including the 2015 Moto E. What makes the Moto G somewhat difficult to use outdoors despite its brightness is the fact that the display seems fairly reflective, and the capacitive touch sensors show up very easily in the light which creates a pattern that obscures the content on the LCD.

Display - White Point

Display - Grayscale Accuracy

The Moto G's gamma is very accurate, but the overall greyscale accuracy is let down by the panel's blue shift. The white point average is 7627K, which is noticeably more blue than the desired average of 6504K. From 20% grey onward one can notice the blue tint in grey shades, and in the end the average error is a somewhat disappointing 4.5532, with the error in the lightest shades being even higher at around six. In all of these aspects, the 2015 Moto G's display actually regresses significantly from the 2014 model. It's not clear if this is just model variance, or if this is applicable to all versions, but in any case it is disappointing.

Display - Saturation Accuracy

In our saturation sweep test we see that blue has a degree of over-saturation at all points, with saturations past 60% overshooting significantly. Red demonstrates some saturation compression, and there's general inaccuracy in yellow, cyan, and most of all, magenta. This is another situation where the 2015 Moto G's display regresses compared to the 2014 edition, and it's to a much more significant degree than the greyscale test, with the older 2014 Moto G having achieved a result that rivals high end smartphones.

Display - GMB Accuracy

Due to the inaccuracy in the greyscale and in rendering primary and secondary colors there's not much hope for accurate reproduction of color mixtures on the 2015 Moto G's display. Shades of green tend to have a decent level of accuracy, but most other colors and shades of grey suffer from over-saturation or under-saturation depending on what primary/secondary color they most relate to, and are just generally inaccurate. When using the Moto G this was fairly evident to me throughout the UI, particularly on icons that I see very often such as those for Google's own apps.

While I don't know how consistent the calibration across Motorola's devices is, based on the results measured for our samples of the 2014 and 2015 Moto G it's clear that the display of the 2015 model regresses in most respects. Peak brightness increases substantially which is appreciated, and maintaining black level has boosted contrast. Unfortunately, the display is far too blue, and this causes significant greyscale errors despite the display's relatively straight and accurate gamma. The inaccuracies in rendering primary and secondary colors combined with the greyscale errors means that there aren't many shades the display actually does render accurately outside of some that primarily consist of a green component. Ultimately I'm let down by the Moto G's display, because this year's model saw no upgrade to resolution, and I had hoped that there would be some improvement, or at the very least no reduction in the display accuracy.

GPU and NAND Performance Camera and WiFi
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  • Pissedoffyouth - Wednesday, August 19, 2015 - link

    I was going to get this but got the Vodafone Smart Ultra 6 instead. If you're in Europe, that smokes this phone in every way for cheaper. £125 for 5.5 1080p screen, SD615, 2GB RAM/16GB.

    only £4 for unlock code on ebay too.
  • kspirit - Wednesday, August 19, 2015 - link

    I love it when you guys post reviews this soon after the device comes out. <3
  • spbx - Wednesday, August 19, 2015 - link

    everyone forgot that this using vanilla android with fasr updates from motorola. I just hope that still remains even lenovo changed moto software dept.
  • EnzoFX - Wednesday, August 19, 2015 - link

    Yeah this is definitely a selling point to consider. Aside from the practicality of the device, the balances it strikes, those flip covers that are so functional and popular too haha, it's about the only thing in it's price range that promises an almost stock interface and prompt updates. It's like having Nexus device. This is why I consider Motorola. Shame about the display this time around though... wonder how bad it really is side-by-side.
  • Moto1 - Wednesday, August 19, 2015 - link

    No
  • Moto1 - Wednesday, August 19, 2015 - link

    No fast updates! I have FIRST gen and ZERO updates. F@#k Motorola
  • Old_Fogie_Late_Bloomer - Thursday, August 20, 2015 - link

    Unless you bought your phone non-carrier-locked, you're blaming the wrong entity. I'm not saying Motorola has been as expeditious as I would have liked, but if your phone is still on KitKat it's Cricket or whomever's fault.
  • hans_ober - Wednesday, August 19, 2015 - link

    Can you try charging it with a different (high amp) charger and report back? Most people aren't gonna use the charger included.
  • Brandon Chester - Wednesday, August 19, 2015 - link

    Actually it's likely that they will. Consumers buying these phones are not likely to have several chargers from previous devices laying around, and any that they do have would obviously be of a similar wattage because most OEMs ship these sub-5W with their non-flagship devices.
  • hans_ober - Wednesday, August 19, 2015 - link

    Ok you're right, but it would be really nice (and helpful) if you could update the review with a high amp charger, which would show an improvement one could gain from getting a better charger, since the phone is not the limiting factor.. Some other markets are shipping ~1A chargers.

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