The Moto X was the first to set on a crusade to prove that high-end smartphones go beyond the number of cores and pixels. Now we have the Moto G on a mission to let everyone know that affordability doesn't necessarily imply crippled functionality. The Moto X was unusual enough to be reasonably successful despite its hefty price tag. The Moto G, on the other hand, is priced to move quickly and will be keeping the competition on their toes.
Not that it will get complacent because of it, like most of the smartphones priced at around the same level do. The Motorola Moto G will bend over backwards to serve you properly and its list of features stretches far longer than most in this price range.
Key features
Quad-band GSM/GPRS/EDGE; quad-band UMTS/HSPA support
4.5" 16M-color 720p IPS LCD capacitive touchscreen with 326ppi pixel density; Gorilla Glass 3
Android OS v4.3 Jelly Bean with Android 4.4 update reportedly coming as soon as January 2014
Qualcomm Snapdragon 400 chipset with quad-core 1.2GHz Cortex-A7 CPU; Adreno 305 GPU
5 MP autofocus camera with LED flash
720p video recording @ 30fps with HDR, continuous autofocus and stereo sound
1.3 MP front-facing camera
Wi-Fi b/g/n; Wi-Fi Hotspot
GPS with A-GPS; GLONASS
8/16GB of built-in storage; 1GB of RAM
microUSB port with USB host
Bluetooth v4.0 LE
Standard 3.5 mm audio jack
Ambient light; accelerometer; proximity sensors
Active noise cancellation with dedicated mic
50GB of free Google Drive storage
2,070 mAh battery
Excellent speaker loudness
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