Making an affordable smartphone for the masses that aren’t willing to spend the dime on flagship-tier devices is a pitch I’ve heard a few times. Usually the device starts out great, but software support ends up being negligible from the start, or the device has serious caveats in actual practice. The number of mid to low end phones I’ve seen which promised to be halo devices of the mass market but are stuck running the same software they launched with could fill a few desk drawers.

I’ve been using Moto G as my daily driver since getting it, and absent a few features (camera, LTE, always on voice and display tuning), the device is surprisingly close to offering a similar kind of experience as the Moto X. Form factor is roughly equivalent, it’s like a Moto X that has put on a few pounds and a few millimeters around the edges. The physical differences aren't huge, and I'm glad that Motorola didn't sacrifice anything major by adding removable back shells. 

On the display side I'd actually opt for an LCD over AMOLED to begin with for power reasons, although with emphasis on calibration. Resolution and contrast is excellent on the Moto G. I miss the camera activation flick gesture from the Moto X, and to a lesser extent the always on voice activation, but trading those off in favor of a lower price point makes a lot of sense given their reliance on extra dedicated silicon and more expensive display. 

The previous generation of Snapdragon 400-based phones that I played with for some reason never really was fast enough to smooth over the demanding parts of Android 4.x. The four Cortex A7s and Adreno 305 in MSM8x26 seem competent enough to run Android at a decent clip without hesitation or dropped frames. I’d wager Motorola’s continued use of F2FS which started with the Moto X also helps the system feel speedy and storage I/O competitive. The storage sizes available are comparatively small at 8 and 16 GB, and given the small price delta between the two there's really no reason anyone should opt for the smaller of the two. I'm eager to see how much the Android 4.4 KitKat update improves memory occupancy on the Moto G, since occasional app suspension is my only usability complaint on Moto G. 

The Moto G grew on me considerably in the time I've spent with it, just like Moto X did before it. The question is ultimately whether the Moto G delivers a good overall experience for the price – I'd argue it definitely does. 

Cellular, WiFi, Speaker, GNSS
Comments Locked

120 Comments

View All Comments

  • haukionkannel - Wednesday, December 18, 2013 - link

    True, but this is not power user phone. The Noto X is for that purpose. For normal mister Smith this is very good phone indeed. But so is/are allso Lumia 52x phone(s), so comparison would be nice as someone above allready said.
  • fic2 - Wednesday, December 18, 2013 - link

    My girlfriend has a 521. It is a nice phone, but the HUGE problem is having to do a hard reset every time there is an upgrade. A hard reset looses all settings. And MS seems incapable of doing a backup that actually backs up everything. The stuff they do backup has to go to "the cloud" (to be datamined by them and the NSA). And when you do a restore it is a one-shot and can only be done over 3G since wireless isn't enabled at the time.
    Because of this I am thinking about getting her a Moto G.
  • skiboysteve - Saturday, December 21, 2013 - link

    What are you talking about? WP updates are OTA incremental and never require a hard reset...
  • shaduck007 - Saturday, January 4, 2014 - link

    thanks for Mentioning the Lumia, it's 1/3 the price of the MOTO G.

    Thinking of what is the best value!!

    Sam
  • sephirotic - Wednesday, February 5, 2014 - link

    If this is not a power use phone then why add quad core, instead of a dual core processor, and a 720p screen? Witch is cheaper and more usefull, that or a SD card slot?
  • grayson_carr - Wednesday, December 18, 2013 - link

    Are power users interested in this phone as their main device? If 8 or 16GB was fine for the flagship Nexus 4 13 months ago, I think it's fine for a low cost phone now.
  • grayson_carr - Wednesday, December 18, 2013 - link

    Lets not forget, the average consumer still buys a 16GB iPhone or 16GB Galaxy S4 and doesn't put in a microSD card in the case of the GS4.
  • fokka - Wednesday, December 18, 2013 - link

    source? regarding the s4 i mean.
  • flyingpants1 - Wednesday, December 18, 2013 - link

    The average consumer doesn't actually use their phone for more than an hour or two a day, leaving it in sleep state 95% of the time and somehow assumes this means it has "good battery life".
    The average consumer does not store hours of movies on their phone, or watch movies on their phone at all.
    The average consumer also can't see the difference between a 5mp camera and a 13mp camera.
    The average consumer sees almost no benefit from 7mbit HSPA+ to 30mbit LTE.
    The average consumer doesn't care about front speakers or waterproofing.
    The average consumer doesn't use a wireless charger.
    The average consumer CANNOT. SEE. The difference between a 540x960 display and a 1080p display.
    The average consumer doesn't run more than a couple apps at the same time.
    The average consumer doesn't care about read/write speeds of the NAND on their phone.
    The average consumer doesn't know the difference between LCD and AMOLED.

    Smartphones are ubiquitous now. Every grandma has a $0 iPhone that they don't know how to use. This doesn't mean we should stop making things better. For god's sake don't make us all suffer on behalf of your demented relatives.
  • apertotes - Wednesday, December 18, 2013 - link

    it was not fine for nexus 4. And I explicitly said that it was not a poweruser scenario at all.

Log in

Don't have an account? Sign up now