Very good phone for the price. Great features, easy and intuitive to use
Very good phone for the price. Great features, easy and intuitive to use
Motorola G30 is more like the higher variant of the Moto G10 . Though both phones come in same display and similar design, but the G30 has slightly better CPU and larger main camera. The screen is a 6.5-inch HD+ display with 720 x 1600 pixels. The panel is same IPS, but support 90Hz refresh rate.
The Moto g30 is an affordable midranger with a 90 Hz screen and corners cut in the right places. Well, the camera is a bit meh.
Good price for value, OK performance, 90 Hz screen instantly shows improved smoothness, Screen colors are nice, Good speaker (but just mono), Long-lasting battery
Camera is sub-par, Max display brightness is pretty weak
The combination of low price and high refresh rate screen was always going to turn heads, but the Moto G30 is impressively well-rounded for such an affordable phone. We love the massive battery and ample onboard storage, and it can take a decent photo, as long as you stick to the main camera sensor. Performance is just acceptable, though, with the odd stutter when jumping between apps, and long loading times when playing games. The Poco X3 NFC delivers a smoother experience with its beefier Snapdragon 732G CPU for just £40 more. If your budget won't stretch that far, however, the Moto G30 is still a heck of a lot of phone for the cash.
Great value hardware; Stellar battery life; Vanilla Android at its best;
Performance merely OK; Gimmicky cameras add little value; Refresh rate doesn't equal smoothness;
Chunky, chinny, and notch-heavy, even with its clunky design, the Moto G30 is still a cracking low-cost smartphone for a certain type of user. Sitting alongside the Moto G9 Power and offering a slightly smaller, significantly more iridescent alternative with virtually identical innards — the fact it costs less and offers more is its saving grace.
Long-lasting 5000mAh battery; 90Hz screen at a low price; Primary camera can deliver great shots;
Weak secondary cameras; Chunky design; Adequate performance;
The Moto G30 is a great budget handset, but its improvements on the Moto G9 Play are marginal at best.
Solid performance, Decent cameras, Brilliant battery life
Minor improvements on the Moto G9 Play, A growing sense of Moto fatigue
Great value hardware; Stellar battery life; Vanilla Android at its best;
Performance merely OK; Gimmicky cameras add little value; Refresh rate doesn’t equal smoothness;
Currently, the Motorola Moto G30 is available on amazon.co.uk for 159 pounds ($220).
good build quality, 90 Hz, 6 GB of RAM, great battery life, good connectivity options
slow memory, dim display, weak SoC, low 720p resolution
The Moto G30 is good for its price, and certainly beats out its G10 sibling, as a fine all-rounder. Save for its stellar battery performance there are no stand-out aspects to the phone though, and depending on what you’re looking for, another handset might offer more.
Excellent battery life; Won’t break the bank; Plenty of storage;
Fingerprint sensor issues; Some may dislike Google Assistant button; Low-res display
Although there's a share of criticism - three of the four cameras are poor, the Pastel Sky finish is questionable - in the interests of context there's little else out there at this price point that can even compete. So long as your expectations are in check then the Moto G30 is one of the best budget phones around.
Long-lasting battery life; Reliable software experience (Android 11); Generally smooth user experience - and able to handle gaming apps; A step-up in power over the Moto G10 for little extra cash;
Wide-angle camera is poor quality; Macro camera is a write-off; Occasional stutter in fluidity; Screen would be better with more resolution instead of 90Hz frame-rate; That green/pink finish is ghastly;
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