Motorola phoned it in this year. As usual, it refreshed its long-running Moto G series with a few new models. They're perfectly fine if you don't want to pay a lot for a phone, but you won't find a better example of complacency. The $300 Moto G Stylus, $250 Moto G Power, and $170 Moto G Play do the bare minimum necessary to meet the bar. As a result, they're already overshadowed by many competitors.
OnePlus recently debuted top-end features like 5G and a 90-Hz screen refresh rate on the $300 Nord N10. And for $350, Google's Pixel 4A has a camera that is leaps and bounds better. The sub-$200 Nokia 5.3 enjoys longer software support than Moto phones, and it can make contactless payments.
With competition so fierce, why not finally add proper water resistance (like the Moto X4 back in 2017)? Or maybe bring wireless charging to the budget market!
The new Moto G lineup isn't bad. The G Power is actually pretty good. There are just better phones out there for $200 to $300.
We tried out all three Moto Gs, and here's a brief overview of all three phones.





