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June 15, 2025
Motorola’s budget lineup has been through some tricky evolutions over the years. It’s added and removed options on both ends, from one-off experiments with the ultra-cheap Moto G Pure, to the Moto G Stylus and Moto G Power continually trading places as the top option. Sometimes, it means there’s a cheap Motorola device for everyone, but it often leaves me confused about which one to recommend. Not anymore.
The $400 Moto G Stylus (2025) is the easiest cheap Motorola phone to recommend, and here’s why.
Along with Motorola’s uncertainty over how to space its budget Android phones, it’s undergone several design swings over the years. When I started reviewing phones, Motorola was all about vibrant colors with centrally placed camera bumps. I loved almost all of them because they made otherwise cheap phones look and feel more exciting. Then, it seemed like Motorola was content to roll out gray rectangle after gray rectangle, complete with corner-mounted cameras that looked like most other budget-minded Android phones. That mentality seeped out into the mid-range and flagship Edge launches, too, which had me worried about what the future of my favorite Moto designs would look like.
Recently, though, Motorola has rediscovered its fun roots. It’s jumped headfirst back into vibrant Pantone colors across all price points, from the top-end Razr Ultra down to the most affordable, and outright bad Moto G (2025). For the 2025 iteration of the Moto G Stylus (there’s only one model this year, so no LTE-only confusion), that means a duo of beautiful blue shades, Gibraltar Sea and Surf The Web, both with vegan leather back panels. I’m glad Motorola sent me Surf The Web, as it’s a bit more of a royal blue than the Gibraltar Sea’s navy blue, but I’d take either one over the muted grays and pale purples that Samsung likes to roll out at this price point.
It’s not just the change in color preferences that’s swept Motorola’s recent lineups, though — I think its Moto G designs look better than ever, too. Yes, they’re all at least somewhat inspired by the new Motorola Edge blueprints in the same way that Samsung’s Galaxy A series pulls right from the Galaxy S25 trio, but I think it works out a bit better in Motorola’s favor. Where Samsung’s cheap phones tend to look pretty generic with their simple camera cutouts, the Moto G Stylus could fall anywhere in Motorola’s range, from being the cheap phone it is to tricking you into thinking it’s a flagship Edge device.
Outside of the general plastic-ness of the Moto G Stylus, the slow, steady improvement in build quality would almost make you think it’s an Edge device, too. In the past, some of Motorola’s budget offerings have had issues with some flex to the back panels, but I haven’t noticed any of that here. The plastic frame is also rigid enough for me to continue using the phone without a case, though I might imagine that combining a MIL-STD 810H rating against drops and IP68 certification for water and dust adds to some of my budget peace of mind.
Of course, I can’t pretend that Motorola’s build quality matches that of its Galaxy A series rivals, as the actual choice of materials really doesn’t. Although Motorola upgraded its durability ratings this time, the Moto G Stylus (2025) is still mostly plastic with just a Gorilla Glass 3 display, while the Galaxy A36 5G puts Corning’s Gorilla Glass Victus Plus on both the front and back. While I think I could probably let this one slip out of my hands once or twice, I’d feel better about slightly tougher glass on most surfaces.
And then, there’s the Moto G Stylus’s signature feature — its stylus. These days, it’s pretty much your only option if you want a phone with a built-in stylus but can’t stump up the cash for Samsung’s Galaxy S25 Ultra. Honestly, the level of functionality between the two isn’t much different. Now that Samsung has eliminated Air Actions and the ability to use the S Pen as a remote camera shutter, it’s not much more than a tapping and drawing option, despite costing three times as much.
On top of that, Motorola’s stylus controls are, well, easier. When you slip the stylus from its housing at the bottom right corner, it automatically opens a menu with Moto Note, Screenshot, Free-form Crop, and Sketch to Image buttons. The Moto G Stylus also supports a Handwriting Calculator, which is a clever idea that I’ve tried once or twice, but I don’t do enough math to justify its presence, nor is my handwriting good enough for the Snapdragon 6 Gen 3 chipset to differentiate my 7s from my 2s every time.
Επίσης, ενώ η σύγκριση ενός Android τηλεφώνου των $400 με ένα των $1,300 είναι άδικη από πολλές απόψεις, πρέπει να δώσω τα εύσημα στη Motorola για τη δημιουργία ενός πολύ πιο άνετου σχεδιασμού εδώ. Το τεράστιο, επίπεδο πλαίσιο της Samsung (και από πάνω και από κάτω) δεν ήταν ποτέ πολύ άνετο για μένα, είτε είχε ελαφρώς στρογγυλεμένες πλευρές είτε όχι, ενώ το Moto G Stylus έχει την κατάλληλη στρογγυλότητα και στις τέσσερις πλευρές. Ποτέ δεν νιώθω ότι πιέζει την παλάμη μου, κάτι που κάνει τη χρήση της οθόνης AMOLED 6,7 ιντσών πολύ πιο ευχάριστη.
Η ίδια η οθόνη είναι επίσης απλά καλή. Η Motorola παρέμεινε με μέτριες LCD για αρκετό καιρό όχι πολύ παλιά, οπότε το να βλέπεις την αναβάθμιση χρόνο με το χρόνο μέχρι το σημείο που φτάνει σχεδόν τα 1.000 nits πιο φωτεινή από το Galaxy A36 5G και έχει ελαφρώς υψηλότερη ανάλυση (444 pixels ανά ίντσα αντί για 385) κάνει να φαίνεται ότι η Motorola έχει λίγο περισσότερα να προσφέρει στο οικονομικό τμήμα αυτή τη στιγμή. Η Motorola έχει επίσης διορθώσει περισσότερο τις απαίσιες γωνίες θέασης που ταλαιπωρούσαν το Moto G Power πριν από μερικά χρόνια, κάνοντάς το έτσι ώστε να μπορώ άνετα να παρακολουθώ το Moto G Stylus είτε δουλεύω στην κουζίνα είτε προσπαθώ να παρακολουθώ ταυτόχρονα αγώνες NWSL και MLS.
Δυστυχώς για το Moto G Stylus, αξιολογώ μερικά tablet ταυτόχρονα αυτή τη στιγμή, οπότε ήταν δύσκολο να επιλέξω μια οθόνη 6,7 ιντσών ως τον κύριο σύντροφο ροής μου, αλλά είμαι ευχαριστημένος με αυτό ως έναν τρόπο να ελέγχω τα highlights ενώ τρέχω benchmarks σε άλλες συσκευές ή να περνώ χρόνο στο Pokémon Go και το Stardew Valley, και τα δύο από τα οποία έχω ξαναρχίσει μετά από πολύ, πολύ καιρό. Εκτιμώ επίσης ότι αυτό το τηλέφωνο έχει ακόμα υποδοχή ακουστικών απέναντι από το stylus στην κάτω άκρη, δείχνοντας ότι ναι, Samsung, μπορείς να έχεις και τα δύο χωρίς να χάσεις μια μπαταρία 5.000mAh.
Η τελευταία σημείωση που έχω για το σχεδιασμό του Moto G Stylus (2025) αφορά τη συσκευασία του. Τα τελευταία χρόνια, η Motorola έχει υιοθετήσει φυσικά χρωματισμένες, χωρίς πλαστικό συσκευασίες για τις συσκευές Moto G και κάποιες από τις συσκευές Edge, και περίμενα ότι αυτό θα συνεχιστεί και αυτή τη φορά. Αντίθετα, η μονάδα αξιολόγησής μου έφτασε σε ένα λευκό κουτί με λίγο λαμπερό κείμενο πάνω του, που μοιάζει με την Motorola να επιστρέφει σε μερικούς από τους οικολογικούς στόχους της. Υποθέτω ότι η συσκευασία δεν έχει μεγάλη σημασία στο μεγάλο σχέδιο των πραγμάτων, αλλά μου άρεσε να δίνω στη Motorola ένα πράσινο thumbs up για τις προσπάθειές της στο παρελθόν, και τώρα δεν μπορώ να πω αν μπορώ ακόμα να το κάνω.
Φυσικά, η κατασκευή ενός καλού οικονομικού τηλεφώνου είναι μόνο η μισή μάχη — έχω επαινέσει πολλά φθηνά σχέδια με τα χρόνια μόνο για να αναφέρω ότι δεν είναι τίποτα περισσότερο από όμορφες εμφανίσεις. Ωστόσο, αυτό που κερδίζει πόντους στο βιβλίο μου για το Moto G Stylus είναι ότι φτάνει λίγο πιο ψηλά. Συνδυάζει σταθερά εσωτερικά με τον εντυπωσιακό σχεδιασμό του και τελικά έχει περισσότερη αξίωση στο όνομα Moto G Power από το ίδιο το Power.
Συγκεκριμένα, το Moto G Stylus διαθέτει ένα πιο αποδοτικό chipset Snapdragon 6 Gen 3 (κατασκευασμένο με διαδικασία 4nm) αντί για το chipset Dimensity 6300 του Moto G Power (κατασκευασμένο με διαδικασία 6nm). Το Stylus επίσης διπλασιάζει την βασική αποθήκευση του Power με 256GB αντί για 128, αν και και τα δύο τηλέφωνα επιτρέπουν την επέκταση μέσω καρτών microSD και προσφέρουν αντίστοιχα 8GB RAM. Όπως πάντα, το φύλλο προδιαγραφών λέει μόνο μέρος της ιστορίας, οπότε είναι καιρός να περάσουμε το Moto G Stylus από το συνηθισμένο μας σετ benchmarks και να επιλέξουμε μερικούς ανταγωνιστές.
Έτσι, συγκέντρωσα λίγο από όλα. Επέλεξα το Moto G Power (2025) για να καταλάβω ποιο τηλέφωνο της Motorola είχε την καλύτερη αξίωση για δύναμη, καθώς και τα Galaxy A26 5G και A36 5G της Samsung, το τελευταίο από τα οποία χρησιμοποιεί επίσης το chipset Snapdragon 6 Gen 3 της Qualcomm. Στη συνέχεια, για καλό μέτρο, πρόσθεσα το Phone 3a Pro της Nothing, το οποίο είναι λίγο πιο ακριβό αλλά ανεβαίνει στο chipset Snapdragon 7s Gen 3 για λίγο περισσότερη ισχύ.
Σε γενικές γραμμές, τα αποτελέσματα ήταν… αναμενόμενα, σχεδόν μέχρι το σημείο να είναι βαρετά. Το Phone 3a Pro έθεσε τον τόνο τόσο στην απόδοση του CPU με έναν πυρήνα όσο και με πολλούς πυρήνες, ενώ το Moto G Stylus και το Galaxy A36 5G ήταν στήθος με στήθος στη δεύτερη θέση. Το Stylus και οι δύο συσκευές Galaxy στη συνέχεια ξεπέρασαν το πρώτο Pro-grade οικονομικό τηλέφωνο της Nothing (μια αντίφαση αν έχω γράψει ποτέ μία) στο πιο ολοκληρωμένο τεστ PCMark Work, όπως και το πιο αδύναμο Moto G Power.
Μεταβαίνοντας στην πλευρά των γραφικών, το τεστ αντοχής 20 εκτελέσεων Wild Life έβαλε το Phone 3a Pro ξανά στην κορυφή της στοίβας, με τους υπόλοιπους ανταγωνιστές να κατατάσσονται σε φθίνουσα σειρά ανά τιμή. Το Moto G Stylus (2025) ήρθε λίγο πριν από το Galaxy A36 5G αλλά παρέμεινε λίγο πάνω από το Galaxy A26 5G, όλα από τα οποία ξεπέρασαν εύκολα το Moto G Power (2025).
Θα έλεγα ότι η καθημερινή απόδοση του Moto G Stylus αντικατοπτρίζει και τα αποτελέσματα των δοκιμών του — καλή και αξιόπιστη, ακόμα κι αν δεν είναι στην κορυφή. Το χρησιμοποιούσα κυρίως ως εφεδρική συσκευή, κυρίως όταν άφηνα το Razr Ultra ή το Galaxy S25 Edge για μία ή δύο ώρες κατά τη διάρκεια της αξιολόγησής τους. Παρόλα αυτά, ανταποκρίθηκε σχεδόν σε όλα όσα ζήτησα, αντιμετωπίζοντας το scrolling στα κοινωνικά δίκτυα και ακούγοντας χωρίς σκέψη λίστες αναπαραγωγής στο YouTube μέσω των ενσύρματων ακουστικών Marshall, απλά επειδή έπρεπε να χρησιμοποιήσω τελικά την υποδοχή ακουστικών.
Έχει, φυσικά, έρθει μαζί μου ως η προεπιλεγμένη συσκευή μου για το Pokémon Go, δίνοντάς μου την ευκαιρία να εξερευνήσω ένα παιχνίδι που δεν είχα παίξει από το τέλος του πανεπιστημίου. Ακόμα και με το βαρύ μείγμα παρακολούθησης GPS και σχεδόν συνεχούς χρήσης γραφικών μεταξύ των συχνών γυμναστηρίων και Pokestops εδώ στην πόλη, το Stylus ανταποκρίθηκε αρκετά καλά στις περιπέτειές μου, επιβραδύνοντας μόνο μία ή δύο φορές σε μια μέρα με 80 βαθμούς που θα είχε δυσκολέψει σχεδόν οποιοδήποτε τηλέφωνο.
Ένα πράγμα που ίσως να περιμένατε λίγο από μια συσκευή προσανατολισμένη στην παραγωγικότητα είναι μια ή δύο λειτουργίες AI. Μετά από όλα, η Motorola μόλις κυκλοφόρησε μια νέα σειρά βελτιώσεων Moto AI στην πρόσφατη κυκλοφορία του Razr, πολλές από τις οποίες κατευθύνονται και στη σειρά Edge. Δυστυχώς, φαίνεται ότι εκεί παραμένει προς το παρόν, καθώς το Moto G Stylus λαμβάνει μόνο το Sketch to Image με το στυλό του και το Circle to Search, που έχει γίνει τόσο κοινό όσο το Google Lens.
Α, και αν ψάχνετε για ένα φθηνό τηλέφωνο που μπορείτε να κρατήσετε για λίγο, ίσως να μην ενθουσιαστείτε να ακούσετε ότι το Moto G Stylus είναι μόνο στη σειρά για δύο ενημερώσεις Android και τρίτο έτος ενημερώσεων ασφαλείας. Το Galaxy A36 5G της Samsung θα λάβει έξι χρόνια υποστήριξης στην ίδια τιμή, και το ελαφρώς πιο ακριβό Pixel 9a προσθέτει ένα έβδομο έτος στο μείγμα. Από την άλλη πλευρά, η Motorola έχει καθαρίσει το bloatware στο Hello UX, μειώνοντας το Moto G Stylus σε έναν φάκελο παιχνιδιών και ένα widget Glance από προεπιλογή. Θα πρέπει να απεγκαταστήσετε το 1Weather, το οποίο είναι ενοχλητικά ακόμα εδώ, αλλά είναι αρκετά εύκολο να το κάνετε.
Και μετά, υπάρχει η διάρκεια ζωής της μπαταρίας — το άλλο κομμάτι του προσιτού παζλ παραγωγικότητας της Motorola. Όπως τα περισσότερα φθηνά τηλέφωνα της Motorola, το Moto G Stylus διαθέτει μια ισχυρή μπαταρία 5,000mAh, και δεν είχα κανένα πρόβλημα να το χρησιμοποιήσω για περισσότερο από μια μέρα εργασίας. Ενδιαφέρον είναι ότι η ελεγχόμενη δοκιμή αποστράγγισης μπαταρίας μας θα σας έκανε να πιστεύετε ότι υπολείπεται πολύ από το Phone 3a και 3a Pro της Nothing, αλλά νομίζω ότι η πραγματική απόδοση είναι περίπου ίση. Το έχω χρησιμοποιήσει για ένα ελαφρώς διαφορετικό μείγμα ευθυνών σε γενικά πιο ζεστό καιρό, αλλά δεν έχω αντιμετωπίσει πολύ άγχος για την μπαταρία.
Ακόμα κι αν είχα, το Moto G Stylus (2025) ισχυρίζεται ότι έχει από την καλύτερη φόρτιση σε αυτή την τιμή. Στην πραγματικότητα, φορτίζει πιο γρήγορα από οποιαδήποτε συσκευή Galaxy ή Pixel, ανεξάρτητα από το πόσο ξοδεύετε. Η Motorola εξόπλισε την κορυφαία οικονομική της προσφορά με ενσύρματη φόρτιση TurboPower 68W και ασύρματη φόρτιση 15W για καλό μέτρο.
Στην εμπειρία μου, οι ενσύρματες δυνατότητες (με έναν συμβατό φορτιστή) μπορούν να σας επαναφέρουν σε λειτουργία σε μόλις λίγο κάτω από μία ώρα — ο ίδιος χρόνος που χρειάζεται για να γεμίσει το Phone 3a της Nothing με έναν φορτιστή USB PD PPS. Είχα λίγο πρόβλημα να φτάσω τις μέγιστες ταχύτητες πριν συνειδητοποιήσω ότι το μπλοκ TurboPower της Motorola φαίνεται να εμπιστεύεται μόνο το παρεχόμενο καλώδιο USB-C του τηλεφώνου, το οποίο έχει αναγνωρίσιμες ροζ άκρες, για το πλήρες 68W. Δεν είμαι σίγουρος γιατί συμβαίνει αυτό, αλλά είναι κάτι που πρέπει να έχετε υπόψη σας.
Με τα οικονομικά τηλέφωνα της Motorola να αντλούν όλο και περισσότερο από τη σειρά Edge, έχει νόημα μόνο το γεγονός ότι το εξόγκωμα της κάμερας του Moto G Stylus φαίνεται οικείο. Κατά την άποψή μου, έχει περίπου το ίδιο μέγεθος με εκείνο στο Edge (2025), και έχει παρόμοιο προσανατολισμό με τρεις αισθητήρες. Υπάρχει μόνο ένα πρόβλημα, όμως: Το Moto G Stylus (2025) έχει μόνο δύο πίσω κάμερες. Έτσι, αυτός ο τρίτος αισθητήρας που βρίσκεται κάτω από το φλας είναι απλά, ε, εκεί για εμφάνιση.
Τα καλά νέα, τουλάχιστον, είναι ότι η Motorola επέλεξε δύο αρκετά καλούς αισθητήρες για το οικονομικό της τηλέφωνο με στυλό. Ο κύριος αισθητήρας 50MP είναι ο ίδιος στοιβαγμένος LYTIA 700C που χρησιμοποίησε η Motorola στο Edge (2025), και έχει εμφανιστεί σε άλλα εξαιρετικά τηλέφωνα κάμερας. Παρέχει αρκετά καλά αποτελέσματα σε καλό φωτισμό. Εκτιμώ ότι η Motorola δεν έβαλε απλά έναν φθηνό αισθητήρα 50MP και το άφησε έτσι, καθώς ο κοινός αισθητήρας σημαίνει ότι οι οικονομικές και οι κορυφαίες συσκευές θα πρέπει να επεξεργάζονται τις εικόνες αρκετά παρόμοια.
Ο δεύτερος αισθητήρας της Motorola είναι ένας αρκετά τυπικός αισθητήρας υπερ-ευρείας γωνίας 13MP με πεδίο θέασης 120 μοιρών. Αυτός δεν ταιριάζει με τον αισθητήρα στο Edge, αν και, όπως θα δείτε σε λίγο, φαίνεται να επεξεργάζεται τις εικόνες του καλύτερα από ό,τι έκανε το Razr Ultra κατά την κυκλοφορία. Δεν υπάρχει περίεργο εφέ σκοτεινιάσματος στον ουρανό, ούτε αισθάνομαι ότι τα χρώματα είναι τόσο υπερβολικά — είναι ζωντανά, αλλά μέσα σε πιο λογικά όρια.
Ας δούμε λοιπόν μερικά δείγματα.
Η πρώτη σειρά φωτογραφιών σου δίνει μια αρκετά καλή ιδέα για το πώς το Moto G Stylus χειρίζεται μια ηλιόλουστη μέρα. Υπάρχουν έντονα χρώματα από αριστερά προς τα δεξιά, είτε το θέμα είναι κοντά, όπως το σύνολο από πολύχρωμα μπαλόνια, είτε λίγο πιο μακριά, όπως το σκάφος που βρίσκεται στη στεριά στη δεξιά πλευρά. Ευτυχώς, δεν φαίνεται ότι η Motorola βασίζεται στα φωτεινά χρώματα για να καλύψει χειρότερες λεπτομέρειες. Είναι εύκολο να διακρίνεις μεμονωμένες σταγόνες βροχής στα μπαλόνια και μπορείς εύκολα να ξεχωρίσεις διαφορετικούς ανθρώπους που περπατούν στο παρασκήνιο του Φεστιβάλ Μικρής Ιταλίας της Βαλτιμόρης.
Είμαι επίσης ευχαριστημένος με την ανίχνευση της λειτουργίας πορτραίτου στην πολύχρωμη πινακίδα που εντόπισα στην Ουάσινγκτον, DC. Ναι, έχει αρκετά καλά καθορισμένες άκρες, αλλά το Moto G Stylus επίσης θόλωσε τη μικρή τρύπα στο κέντρο της πινακίδας, μια ωραία πινελιά που άλλα οικονομικά τηλέφωνα συχνά παραλείπουν.
Αυτή η δεύτερη σειρά προσφέρει μια παρόμοια ματιά στην αναδημιουργία χρωμάτων του Moto G Stylus. Κάνει το πρωινό μου πριν από το Grand Slam Track event στη Φιλαδέλφεια να φαίνεται τόσο καλό όσο γεύτηκε — και γεύτηκε αρκετά καλά. Η άνοιξη είναι κάτι σαν εποχή πανηγυριών εδώ στη Βαλτιμόρη, οπότε όταν βρέθηκα με έναν κλειστό δρόμο και μια υπέροχη θέα σε μία από τις παλαιότερες εκκλησίες της πόλης, έπρεπε να τραβήξω μια ή δύο φωτογραφίες. Παρά την απουσία ενός ειδικού τηλεφακού, είμαι ευχαριστημένος με την κεντρική περικοπή από τον κύριο αισθητήρα των 50MP και δεν παρατηρώ καμία αλλαγή στο προφίλ χρώματος από το ζουμ 1x.
Μεταβαίνοντας στον υπερευρυγώνιο αισθητήρα — και στη λειτουργία μακρογραφίας που βασίζεται στο λογισμικό — φαίνεται ότι η Motorola έχει καλύτερο έλεγχο μιας συνεπούς επιστήμης χρωμάτων από ό,τι τα προηγούμενα χρόνια. Έχω δοκιμάσει αρκετές συσκευές Moto G που έρχονται με σημαντικές αλλαγές από τον κύριο αισθητήρα στον υπερευρυγώνιο, αλλά δεν νιώθω ότι αυτό συμβαίνει εδώ. Ο αισθητήρας των 13MP διατηρεί ακόμα αξιοπρεπείς λεπτομέρειες από τα μεγαλύτερα pixel του και τα πιο έντονα χρώματα δίνουν λίγο περισσότερη ζωή στις λήψεις μου, ειδικά στις σημαίες μπροστά από το Μνημείο της Ουάσινγκτον.
Αυτή τη φορά, τα φωτεινά ροζ της ορτανσίας που κατέγραψα σε λειτουργία μακρογραφίας φαίνεται να συγχωνεύονται λίγο. Ξέρω ότι δεν υπάρχουν αιχμηρές άκρες μέσα στα λουλούδια, οπότε το Moto G Stylus προσθέτει κάποια ευκρίνεια μετά το γεγονός, και ενώ λειτουργεί για τις σταγόνες νερού, τονίζει μερικές από τις ρυτίδες στα λουλούδια λίγο παραπάνω.
Έχω ήδη αναφέρει την έλλειψη τηλεφακού, που μπορεί να υποδηλώνει πώς το Moto G Stylus χειρίζεται μεγαλύτερες εστιακές αποστάσεις, δηλαδή δεν το κάνει, πραγματικά. Νομίζω ότι το τηλέφωνο είναι μια χαρά μέχρι περίπου το ζουμ 4x, καθώς το Καπιτώλιο των ΗΠΑ εξακολουθεί να φαίνεται αρκετά καθαρό με καλές λεπτομέρειες στα δέντρα που περιβάλλουν το National Mall. Θα ένιωθα άνετα να το δημοσιεύσω στην ιστορία μου στο Instagram χωρίς να ζουμάρω, αν και δεν θα έλεγα το ίδιο για τη λήψη στο ζουμ 10x. Ναι, εξακολουθεί να αναγνωρίζεται ως το Καπιτώλιο των ΗΠΑ, αλλά μοιάζει με απόδοση χαμηλότερης ανάλυσης, και μπορώ να διακρίνω το κίτρινο φορτηγό Penske στο προσκήνιο μόνο επειδή το έχω δει χιλιάδες φορές στην πόλη.
Κλείνοντας, το Moto G Stylus (2025) διαθέτει κάμερα selfie 32MP με οπή στο πάνω μέρος της οθόνης των 6,7 ιντσών. Είναι απολύτως κατάλληλη για τις βασικές ανάγκες selfie σου — δεν έχω προβλήματα με τις λεπτομέρειες σε λειτουργία πορτραίτου ή κανονική λειτουργία, αν και δεν είμαι σίγουρος ότι μου αρέσει η αλλαγή στην επεξεργασία εικόνας. Νομίζω ότι η κανονική selfie φαίνεται λίγο πιο ακριβής χρωματικά, προσθέτοντας μια ελαφρώς πιο σκούρα σκιά στο πουκάμισό μου, ενώ η λήψη πορτραίτου κάνει τα πάντα να φαίνονται λίγο πιο φωτεινά. Είναι μια μικρή αλλαγή, αλλά μία που παρατηρώ μετά από τόσες selfies σε συσκευές Android. Τουλάχιστον, η ανίχνευση πορτραίτου της Motorola είναι ακριβής.
Αν σκέφτεσαι το Moto G Stylus ως μια φθηνή συσκευή για βίντεο, να ξέρεις ότι φτάνει μέχρι και την εγγραφή 4K στα 30fps από τις μπροστινές και πίσω κάμερες, αν και μπορεί επίσης να καταγράψει υλικό 1080p στα 60fps. Κυρίως έμεινα στο βίντεο 4K ενώ περπατούσα στα φεστιβάλ στη Βαλτιμόρη, και έμεινα αρκετά εντυπωσιασμένος με τη σταθεροποίηση στα κλιπ μου, αν και θα ήθελα να δω υποστήριξη 4K στα 60fps για $400.
Μπορείς να δεις εκδόσεις πλήρους ανάλυσης όλων των δειγμάτων κάμερας μου (και αρκετές δεκάδες περισσότερα) σε αυτόν τον σύνδεσμο Google Drive.
Αν υπάρχει ένα φθηνό τηλέφωνο Motorola που αξίζει να προτείνεις, είναι αυτό — τόσο απλά. Ναι, το Moto G Power μπορεί να προσφέρει μια ελαφρώς πιο ανθεκτική οθόνη Gorilla Glass 5, αλλά το Moto G Stylus (2025) τσεκάρει όλα τα άλλα κουτάκια στο δρόμο του. Είναι πιο ισχυρό, φορτίζει γρηγορότερα, προσφέρει καλύτερες επιλογές χρωμάτων (κυρίως επειδή το Surf The Web κερδίζει το Leaf Green κατά τη γνώμη μου) και έρχεται με την ίδια αξιόπιστη πιστοποίηση IP68, ακόμα κι αν παραλείπει το πρόσθετο IP69. Ω, και έρχεται με ενσωματωμένο στυλό για πρόσθετη ευελιξία, που μπορείς να βρεις μόνο στο Galaxy S25 Ultra αλλιώς.
Αυτό που λέγεται, το Moto G Stylus (2025) εξακολουθεί να υποφέρει από μερικά κλασικά λάθη της Motorola. Υπάρχει ακόμα λίγη περιττή λογισμική εφαρμογή με τη μορφή ενός φακέλου παιχνιδιών που μπορείτε να απενεργοποιήσετε και το 1Weather, το οποίο θα πρέπει να απεγκαταστήσετε αμέσως — αλλά τουλάχιστον είναι λιγότερη από προηγούμενες γενιές. Αυτή τη στιγμή, το μεγαλύτερο πρόβλημα με την προτεινόμενη οικονομική συσκευή της Motorola είναι ότι η υποστήριξη λογισμικού της είναι δεύτερη, καλά, σε όλους τους άλλους. Δύο ενημερώσεις Android και τρίτος χρόνος ενημερώσεων ασφαλείας δεν είναι αρκετές όταν αντίπαλοι όπως η Samsung προσφέρουν περισσότερες από διπλάσιες, και η Google φτάνει στα επτά χρόνια αν επιλέξετε ένα Pixel.
Και όταν βάζετε μια αρκετά σύντομη ημερομηνία λήξης σε ένα Android τηλέφωνο των 400 δολαρίων, γίνεται πολύ πιο εύκολο να κοιτάξετε αλλού για την επόμενη συσκευή σας. Σίγουρα, θα μπορούσατε να κοιτάξετε το Moto G Power (2025) της Motorola ($299.99 στο Amazon), το οποίο έχει τις ίδιες δυνατότητες κάμερας, παρόμοιο ελαφρύ λογισμικό και σχεδόν ίδιες φινιρίσματα από βίγκαν δέρμα, αλλά έχει τις ίδιες αδυναμίες επίσης. Είναι φορτωμένο με την ίδια περιττή λογισμική εφαρμογή, την ίδια σύντομη δέσμευση ενημέρωσης και μειώνεται σε 30W ενσύρματη φόρτιση αντί για 68W. Αυτό είναι ακόμα αρκετά καλό σε σύγκριση με τις περισσότερες επιλογές από τη Samsung και τη Google, αλλά λιγότερο συναρπαστικό όταν έχετε δοκιμάσει την πραγματική TurboPower.
Εκτός της ομπρέλας της Motorola, η σειρά Galaxy A της Samsung με προσανατολισμό στον προϋπολογισμό πιθανότατα έχει περισσότερο νόημα. Το Galaxy A36 5G ($399.99 στο Amazon) είναι σχεδόν τέλεια αντιστοιχία για το Moto G Stylus, εφόσον μπορείτε να ζήσετε χωρίς το χαρακτηριστικό που του δίνει το όνομά του. Τα δύο τηλέφωνα μοιράζονται τα ίδια chipsets, αντίστοιχες μπαταρίες και οθόνες AMOLED 6,7 ιντσών, ενώ η επιλογή της Samsung προσθέτει μια τρίτη κάμερα στο μείγμα — έναν ειδικό αισθητήρα macro 5MP. Το Galaxy A36 5G βγαίνει άνετα μπροστά από το Moto G Stylus όσον αφορά την ανθεκτικότητα, όμως, αφού έχει Gorilla Glass Victus Plus και στις δύο πλευρές του πλαστικού πλαισίου του.
Αν ζείτε εκτός των ΗΠΑ, μπορεί επίσης να θέλετε να ελέγξετε το Nothing Phone 3a ($374 στο Amazon) ή το Phone 3a Pro ($459.99 στο Nothing). Είναι σχεδόν πανομοιότυπα εκτός από τις εξογκώματα κάμερας, που σημαίνει ότι και τα δύο έχουν chipsets Snapdragon 7s Gen 3, οθόνες 6,77 ιντσών και το έξυπνο Glyph Interface στο πίσω μέρος για ειδοποιήσεις και χρονομετρητές. Το Nothing OS ήταν επίσης μια από τις αγαπημένες μας εκδόσεις Android από την αρχή, φέρνοντας μια μήτρα με κουκκίδες στα περισσότερα από τα widgets του ενώ διατηρεί μια σχετικά ελαφριά, Pixel-όπως διεπαφή. Αν χρειάζεστε ελαφρώς καλύτερη δυνατότητα zoom, όμως, θα θέλετε να αποκτήσετε το Phone 3a Pro με τον μεγαλύτερο αισθητήρα τηλεφακού 50MP.
Μια τελευταία επιλογή που αξίζει να εξετάσετε είναι το Pixel 9a της Google ($499 στο Amazon), αλλά θα πρέπει να ξοδέψετε περισσότερα. Αν είστε πρόθυμοι να το δοκιμάσετε, θα αποκτήσετε τη μεγαλύτερη μπαταρία διαθέσιμη σε ένα Pixel, το τελευταίο chipset Tensor G4 της Google (το ίδιο που βρίσκεται σε όλα τα κορυφαία Pixels), και επτά χρόνια ενημερώσεων που περιλαμβάνουν πτώσεις χαρακτηριστικών. Θα αποκτήσετε επίσης τη μεγαλύτερη ποικιλία χαρακτηριστικών με τεχνητή νοημοσύνη από το μεσαίο εύρος της Google, κάτι που δεν θα βρείτε σε πολλές φθηνότερες επιλογές Android.
Σας ευχαριστούμε που είστε μέρος της κοινότητάς μας. Διαβάστε την Πολιτική Σχολίων μας πριν δημοσιεύσετε.
Affiliate links on Android Authority may earn us a commission. Learn more. MobileRyan Haines / Android AuthorityThe Moto G Stylus (2025) is finally a budget Motorola phone for power usersIf you need a cheap Motorola device, this one checks the most boxes.By •June 15, 2025••Moto G Stylus (2025)The Moto G Stylus (2025) feels like Motorola pulled together almost everything that's worked about its best budget phones and put it into one device. It charges quickly, performs well, and comes with a built-in stylus that's way easier than drawing with a fingertip. I'm begging for longer update support, but otherwise, this is a great cheap Android phone.MSRP: $399.99Check priceWhat we likeSolid camera optionsExcellent wired chargingConvenient built-in stylusCleaned up bloatwareEye-catching blue finishesImproved AMOLED panelWhat we don't likeUnderwhelming update commitmentCheaper plastic constructionBattery life is decent but not greatMoto G Stylus (2025)The Moto G Stylus (2025) feels like Motorola pulled together almost everything that's worked about its best budget phones and put it into one device. It charges quickly, performs well, and comes with a built-in stylus that's way easier than drawing with a fingertip. I'm begging for longer update support, but otherwise, this is a great cheap Android phone.Motorola’s budget lineup has been through some tricky evolutions over the years. It’s added and removed options on both ends, from one-off experiments with the ultra-cheap Moto G Pure, to the Moto G Stylus and Moto G Power continually trading places as the top option. Sometimes, it means there’s a cheap Motorola device for everyone, but it often leaves me confused about which one to recommend. Not anymore.The $400 Moto G Stylus (2025) is the easiest cheap Motorola phone to recommend, and here’s why. All dressed up in blueRyan Haines / Android AuthorityAlong with Motorola’s uncertainty over how to space its budget Android phones, it’s undergone several design swings over the years. When I started reviewing phones, Motorola was all about vibrant colors with centrally placed camera bumps. I loved almost all of them because they made otherwise cheap phones look and feel more exciting. Then, it seemed like Motorola was content to roll out gray rectangle after gray rectangle, complete with corner-mounted cameras that looked like most other budget-minded Android phones. That mentality seeped out into the mid-range and flagship Edge launches, too, which had me worried about what the future of my favorite Moto designs would look like.Recently, though, Motorola has rediscovered its fun roots. It’s jumped headfirst back into vibrant Pantone colors across all price points, from the top-end Razr Ultra down to the most affordable, and outright bad Moto G (2025). For the 2025 iteration of the Moto G Stylus (there’s only one model this year, so no LTE-only confusion), that means a duo of beautiful blue shades, Gibraltar Sea and Surf The Web, both with vegan leather back panels. I’m glad Motorola sent me Surf The Web, as it’s a bit more of a royal blue than the Gibraltar Sea’s navy blue, but I’d take either one over the muted grays and pale purples that Samsung likes to roll out at this price point. Motorola's partnership with Pantone is making cheap phones fun again. It’s not just the change in color preferences that’s swept Motorola’s recent lineups, though — I think its Moto G designs look better than ever, too. Yes, they’re all at least somewhat inspired by the new Motorola Edge blueprints in the same way that Samsung’s Galaxy A series pulls right from the Galaxy S25 trio, but I think it works out a bit better in Motorola’s favor. Where Samsung’s cheap phones tend to look pretty generic with their simple camera cutouts, the Moto G Stylus could fall anywhere in Motorola’s range, from being the cheap phone it is to tricking you into thinking it’s a flagship Edge device.Outside of the general plastic-ness of the Moto G Stylus, the slow, steady improvement in build quality would almost make you think it’s an Edge device, too. In the past, some of Motorola’s budget offerings have had issues with some flex to the back panels, but I haven’t noticed any of that here. The plastic frame is also rigid enough for me to continue using the phone without a case, though I might imagine that combining a MIL-STD 810H rating against drops and IP68 certification for water and dust adds to some of my budget peace of mind.Of course, I can’t pretend that Motorola’s build quality matches that of its Galaxy A series rivals, as the actual choice of materials really doesn’t. Although Motorola upgraded its durability ratings this time, the Moto G Stylus (2025) is still mostly plastic with just a Gorilla Glass 3 display, while the Galaxy A36 5G puts Corning’s Gorilla Glass Victus Plus on both the front and back. While I think I could probably let this one slip out of my hands once or twice, I’d feel better about slightly tougher glass on most surfaces. And then, there’s the Moto G Stylus’s signature feature — its stylus. These days, it’s pretty much your only option if you want a phone with a built-in stylus but can’t stump up the cash for Samsung’s Galaxy S25 Ultra. Honestly, the level of functionality between the two isn’t much different. Now that Samsung has eliminated Air Actions and the ability to use the S Pen as a remote camera shutter, it’s not much more than a tapping and drawing option, despite costing three times as much.On top of that, Motorola’s stylus controls are, well, easier. When you slip the stylus from its housing at the bottom right corner, it automatically opens a menu with Moto Note, Screenshot, Free-form Crop, and Sketch to Image buttons. The Moto G Stylus also supports a Handwriting Calculator, which is a clever idea that I’ve tried once or twice, but I don’t do enough math to justify its presence, nor is my handwriting good enough for the Snapdragon 6 Gen 3 chipset to differentiate my 7s from my 2s every time.Also, while comparing a $400 Android phone to a $1,300 one in most respects is unfair, I have to give Motorola credit for creating the much more comfortable design here. Samsung’s massive, flat-topped (and bottomed) frame has never been very comfortable to me, whether it had slightly rounded sides or not, yet the Moto G Stylus puts just the right level of roundness around all four sides. It never feels like it’s digging into the palm of my hand, which makes using its 6.7-inch AMOLED much more enjoyable. The display itself is just plain good, too. Motorola stuck with just-okay LCDs for a while not that long ago, so to see it upgrade year after year to the point where it peaks at nearly 1,000 nits brighter than the Galaxy A36 5G and has a slightly higher resolution (444 pixels per inch instead of 385) makes it feel like Motorola has just a little bit more to give to the budget segment right now. Motorola has also more than rectified the awful viewing angles that plagued the Moto G Power a few years ago, making it so that I can comfortably keep an eye on the Moto G Stylus whether I’m working around the kitchen or trying to keep up with NWSL and MLS matches simultaneously.I am, unfortunately for the Moto G Stylus, reviewing a couple of tablets at the same time right now, so it’s been tough to pick a 6.7-inch display as my primary streaming companion, but I’ve been pleased with it as a way to check highlights while running benchmarks on other devices or waste time in Pokémon Go and Stardew Valley, both of which I’ve picked back up after a long, long time away. I also appreciate that this phone still has a headphone jack opposite its stylus on the bottom edge, showing that yes, Samsung, you can have both without losing a 5,000mAh battery.Ryan Haines / Android AuthorityThe last note I have on the Moto G Stylus (2025) design concerns its packaging. In the last few years, Motorola has adopted naturally colored, plastic-free packaging for its Moto G devices and some of its Edge devices, and I expected that to continue this time around. Instead, my review unit arrived in a white box with some slightly shiny text on it, which feels like Motorola going back on a few of its eco-minded goals. I guess packaging doesn’t matter too much in the grand scheme of things, but I liked giving Motorola a green thumbs up for its efforts in the past, and now I can’t tell if I can still do so. Would the real Moto G ‘Power’ please stand up?Ryan Haines / Android AuthorityOf course, building a good-looking budget phone is only half the battle — I’ve praised plenty of cheap designs over the years only to turn around and report that they’re little more than pretty faces. However, what earns the Moto G Stylus points in my book is that it reaches a little bit higher. It combines solid internals with its eye-catching design and ultimately has more of a claim to the Moto G Power name than the Power itself.Specifically, the Moto G Stylus packs a more efficient Snapdragon 6 Gen 3 chipset (built with a 4nm process) instead of the Moto G Power’s Dimensity 6300 chipset (built with a 6nm process). The Stylus also doubles the Power’s base storage with 256GB instead of 128, though both phones allow for expansion via microSD cards and offer matching 8GB of RAM. As always, the spec sheet only tells part of the story, so it’s time to run the Moto G Stylus through our usual set of benchmarks and pick out a few choice rivals. The Moto G Stylus makes good use of its Snapdragon 6 Gen 3 chipset, but its real strength lies in TurboPower charging. So, I stacked up a little bit of everything. I picked out the Moto G Power (2025) to figure out which Motorola phone had the best claim to power, as well as Samsung’s Galaxy A26 5G and A36 5G, the latter of which also uses Qualcomm’s Snapdragon 6 Gen 3 chipset. Then, for good measure, I added Nothing’s Phone 3a Pro, which is a little more expensive but steps up to the Snapdragon 7s Gen 3 chipset for a little more punch. Across the board, the results were… unsurprising, almost to the point of being boring. The Phone 3a Pro set the tone in both single-core and multi-core CPU performance, while the Moto G Stylus and Galaxy A36 5G were neck and neck in second place. The Stylus and both Galaxy devices then jumped past Nothing’s first Pro-grade budget phone (a contradiction if ever I’ve written one) in the more comprehensive PCMark Work test, as did the weaker Moto G Power.Switching over to the graphics side, the 20-run Wild Life stress test put the Phone 3a Pro right back on top of the pile, with the rest of the competitors shaking out in descending order by price. The Moto G Stylus (2025) came up just short of the Galaxy A36 5G but stayed just above the Galaxy A26 5G, all of which easily breezed past the Moto G Power (2025).Ryan Haines / Android AuthorityI’d say the Moto G Stylus’s day-to-day performance mirrors its benchmarking results, too — good and reliable, even if not at the top of the pile. It’s spent most of its time with me as a backup device, coming out mostly when I’d put down the Razr Ultra or Galaxy S25 Edge for an hour or two while reviewing them. Through that, though, it’s responded to almost everything I’ve asked, tackling social media scrolling and mindlessly listening to YouTube playlists through my wired Marshall headphones, simply because I had to use the headphone jack eventually.It has, of course, also come with me as my default Pokémon Go machine, giving me a chance to explore a game I haven’t played since the end of college. Even with the heavy mix of GPS tracking and near-constant graphics usage between the frequent gyms and Pokestops here in the city, the Stylus has taken to my adventures pretty well, only slowing down once or twice on an 80-degree day that would have put a hurting on just about any phone.Ryan Haines / Android AuthorityOne thing you might have expected just a little bit of in a productivity-minded device, though, is an AI feature or two. After all, Motorola just rolled out a new suite of Moto AI improvements to its recent Razr launch, much of which is headed for the Edge lineup, too. Unfortunately, that seems to be where it’s staying for now, as the Moto G Stylus only gets Sketch to Image with its stylus and Circle to Search, which has become as common as Google Lens.Oh, and if you’re after a cheap phone that you can keep for a while, you might not be thrilled to hear that the Moto G Stylus is only in line for two Android updates and a third year of security patches. Samsung’s Galaxy A36 5G will get six years of support at the same price point, and the slightly more expensive Pixel 9a adds a seventh year to the mix. On the bright side, Motorola has cleaned up the bloatware in Hello UX, paring down the Moto G Stylus to a gaming folder and Glance widget by default. You’ll have to uninstall 1Weather, which is annoyingly still here, but it’s easy enough to do.And then, there’s the battery life — the other piece of Motorola’s affordable productivity puzzle. Like most cheap Motorola phones, the Moto G Stylus packs a hearty 5,000mAh cell, and I’ve had no problems putting it through more than a day’s worth of work. Interestingly, our controlled battery drain test would make you think it falls far behind Nothing’s Phone 3a and 3a Pro, but I think the actual performance is about even. I’ve called on it for a slightly different mix of responsibilities in generally hotter weather, but I haven’t faced much battery anxiety. Even if I had, the Moto G Stylus (2025) claims some of the best charging at this price point. In fact, it charges faster than any Galaxy device or Pixel, no matter how much you spend. Motorola packed its top budget offering with blistering 68W wired TurboPower charging and 15W wireless charging for good measure.In my experience, the wired capabilities (with a compatible charger) can get you back on your feet in just a shade under an hour — the same time it takes to fill Nothing’s Phone 3a with a USB PD PPS charger. I did have a little trouble reaching peak speeds before I realized Motorola’s TurboPower block only seems to trust the phone’s included USB-C cable, which has identifiable pink tips, for the full 68W rate. I’m not sure why that is, but it’s something to keep in mind. Sometimes, two cameras are all you needRyan Haines / Android AuthorityWith Motorola’s budget phones pulling increasingly from its flagship Edge lineup, it only makes sense that the Moto G Stylus’s camera bump looks familiar. To my eye, it’s about the same size as the one on the Edge (2025), and it has a similar orientation of three sensors. There’s just one problem, though: The Moto G Stylus (2025) only has two rear cameras. So, that third sensor that sits below the flash is just kind of, well, there for appearances.The good news, at least, is that Motorola chose two pretty solid sensors for its stylus-toting budget phone. The 50MP primary sensor is the same stacked LYTIA 700C that Motorola used on its Edge (2025), and it has popped up on other great camera phones. It delivers some pretty solid results in good lighting. I appreciate that Motorola didn’t simply slap a cheap 50MP sensor on there and call it a day, as the shared sensor means the budget and flagship devices should process images pretty similarly.Motorola’s second shooter is a fairly standard 13MP ultrawide sensor with a 120-degree field of view. This one doesn’t match the sensor on the Edge, though, as you’ll see in a moment, it seems to process its images better than the Razr Ultra did at launch. There’s no weird darkening effect in the sky, nor do I feel like the colors are quite as overblown — they’re punchy, just within more reasonable limits.Anyway, let’s get to some samples. The first row of shots gives you a pretty good idea of how the Moto G Stylus handles a sunny day. There are punchy colors from left to right, whether the subject is up close, like the set of rainbow balloons, or a little further away, like the dry-docked boat on the right side. Thankfully, it doesn’t seem like Motorola is relying on bright colors to cover over worse details, either. It’s easy to pick out individual droplets of rain on the balloons, and you can easily pick out different people walking around the background of Baltimore’s Little Italy Festival.I’m also pleased with the portrait mode detection on the colorful sign I spotted in Washington, DC. Yes, it has pretty well-defined edges, but the Moto G Stylus also blurred the tiny hole in the middle of the sign, a nice touch that other budget phones often miss. This second row offers a similar look at the Moto G Stylus’s color recreation. It makes my brunch ahead of the Grand Slam Track event in Philadelphia look just about as good as it tasted — and it tasted pretty good. Spring is something like street fair season here in Baltimore, so when I found myself with a closed street and a great view of one of the city’s older churches, I had to grab a snap or two. Despite not having a dedicated telephoto sensor, I’m pleased with the central crop from the 50MP primary sensor, and I don’t notice any shift in color profile from 1x zoom. Shifting to the ultrawide sensor — and the software-based macro mode — it seems like Motorola has better control over a consistent color science than in years past. I’ve tested my fair share of Moto G devices that come with significant shifts from the primary sensor to the ultrawide, but I don’t feel like that’s the case here. The 13MP sensor still holds onto decent details from its larger pixels, and the punchier colors bring a little more life to my shots, especially in the flags in front of the Washington Monument.This time, the bright pinks of the hydrangea I captured in macro mode seem to bleed together just a bit. I know there aren’t sharp edges within the flowers themselves, so the Moto G Stylus is adding some sharpening after the fact, and while it works for the water droplets, it emphasizes a few of the wrinkles in the flowers just a little bit too much. I’ve already mentioned the lack of a telephoto sensor, which might hint at how the Moto G Stylus handles longer focal lengths, which is to say that it doesn’t, really. I think the phone is just fine up to about 4x zoom, as the US Capitol still looks sharp enough with okay details in the trees lining the National Mall. I’d feel fine posting that one to my Instagram story without zooming in, though I wouldn’t say the same for the shot at 10x zoom. Yes, it’s still identifiable as the US Capitol, but it feels like a lower-resolution rendering, and I can only pick out the yellow Penske truck in the foreground because I’ve seen the same one a thousand times around the city. Wrapping us up, the Moto G Stylus (2025) has a 32MP punch-hole selfie camera at the top of its 6.7-inch display. It’s perfectly fine for your basic selfie needs — I have no issues with the details in portrait or standard modes, though I’m not sure I love the shift in image processing. I think the standard selfie looks a little more color-accurate, putting a slightly darker shadow onto my shirt, while the portrait shot makes everything seem a little bit brighter. It’s a slight shift, but one that I notice after having taken selfies on so many Android devices. At the very least, Motorola’s portrait detection is spot-on.If you’re eyeing the Moto G Stylus as a cheap video shooter, know that it tops out with 4K recording at 30fps from both the front and rear cameras, though it can also record 1080p footage at 60fps. I mostly stuck to 4K video while walking around the festivals in Baltimore, and I came away pretty impressed with the stabilization in my clips, though I’d have liked to see 4K at 60fps support for $400.You can check out full-resolution versions of all of my camera samples (and several dozen more) at this Google Drive link. Motorola Moto G Stylus (2025) review: The Moto G for most peopleRyan Haines / Android AuthorityIf there’s one cheap Motorola phone worth recommending, it’s this one — simple as that. Yes, the Moto G Power might offer a slightly more durable Gorilla Glass 5 display, but the Moto G Stylus (2025) checks all the other boxes on its way down. It’s more powerful, charges faster, offers better color options (mostly because Surf The Web beats Leaf Green in my book), and comes with the same reliable IP68 certification, even if it skips the IP69 add-on. Oh, and it comes with a built-in stylus for added flexibility, which you can only get from the Galaxy S25 Ultra otherwise.That said, the Moto G Stylus (2025) still suffers from a couple of classic Motorola stumbles. There’s still a bit of bloatware in the form of a gaming folder that you can turn off and 1Weather, which you should immediately uninstall — but at least it’s less bloat than in previous generations. Right now, the bigger problem with recommending a budget-friendly Motorola device is that its software support is second to, well, everyone else. Two Android updates and a third year of security patches aren’t enough when rivals like Samsung offer more than double that, and Google goes to seven years if you pick up a Pixel. The Moto G Stylus is Motorola's best budget phone in a long time… but it's taking on a new class of competitors. And when you put a fairly short expiration date on a $400 Android phone, it becomes much easier to look elsewhere for your next device. Sure, you could look at Motorola’s in-house Moto G Power (2025) ($299.99 at Amazon), which has the same camera strengths, similar lightweight software, and nearly identical vegan leather finishes, but it has the same weaknesses, too. It’s saddled with the same bloatware, the same short update commitment, and drops down to 30W wired charging instead of 68W. That’s still pretty good compared to most options from Samsung and Google, but less exciting when you’ve tried true TurboPower.Outside of the Motorola umbrella, Samsung’s budget-minded Galaxy A series probably makes the most sense. Its Galaxy A36 5G ($399.99 at Amazon) is nearly a perfect match for the Moto G Stylus, so long as you can live without the eponymous feature. The two phones share identical chipsets, matching batteries, and 6.7-inch AMOLED panels, while Samsung’s option adds a third camera to the mix — a dedicated 5MP macro sensor. The Galaxy A36 5G does come out comfortably ahead of the Moto G Stylus in terms of durability, though, sandwiching Gorilla Glass Victus Plus on both sides of its plastic frame. If you live outside the US, you might also want to check out the Nothing Phone 3a ($374 at Amazon) or the Phone 3a Pro ($459.99 at Nothing). They’re almost identical outside their camera bumps, meaning both have Snapdragon 7s Gen 3 chipsets, 6.77-inch displays, and the clever Glyph Interface on the back for notifications and timers. Nothing OS has also been one of our favorite Android skins since the start, bringing a dot-based matrix to most of its widgets while keeping a relatively light, Pixel-like interface. If you need slightly better zoom capability, though, you’ll want to grab the Phone 3a Pro with its larger 50MP telephoto sensor.One last option worth considering is Google’s Pixel 9a ($499 at Amazon), but you’ll have to spend more. If you’re willing to try it, you’ll get the biggest battery available on a Pixel, Google’s latest Tensor G4 chipset (the same one found on all of the flagship Pixels), and seven years of updates that include feature drops. You’ll also get the widest variety of AI-powered features from Google’s mid-ranger, which isn’t something you’ll find on many cheaper Android options. Moto G Stylus (2025)Built-in stylus • Vibrant OLED screen • Fast 68W chargingMSRP: $399.99Doing things in styl-us.The Motorola Moto G Stylus (2025) charges quickly, has decent performance, and comes with a built-in stylus that's way easier than drawing with a fingertip.See price at AmazonPositivesSolid camera optionsExcellent wired chargingConvenient built-in stylusCleaned up bloatwareEye-catching blue finishesImproved AMOLED panelConsUnderwhelming update commitmentCheaper plastic constructionBattery life is decent but not greatReviewsMotorolaMotorola Moto GFollowThank you for being part of our community. 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MobileRyan Haines / Android AuthorityThe Moto G Stylus (2025) is finally a budget Motorola phone for power usersIf you need a cheap Motorola device, this one checks the most boxes.By •June 15, 2025••Moto G Stylus (2025)The Moto G Stylus (2025) feels like Motorola pulled together almost everything that's worked about its best budget phones and put it into one device. It charges quickly, performs well, and comes with a built-in stylus that's way easier than drawing with a fingertip. I'm begging for longer update support, but otherwise, this is a great cheap Android phone.MSRP: $399.99Check priceWhat we likeSolid camera optionsExcellent wired chargingConvenient built-in stylusCleaned up bloatwareEye-catching blue finishesImproved AMOLED panelWhat we don't likeUnderwhelming update commitmentCheaper plastic constructionBattery life is decent but not greatMoto G Stylus (2025)The Moto G Stylus (2025) feels like Motorola pulled together almost everything that's worked about its best budget phones and put it into one device. It charges quickly, performs well, and comes with a built-in stylus that's way easier than drawing with a fingertip. I'm begging for longer update support, but otherwise, this is a great cheap Android phone.Motorola’s budget lineup has been through some tricky evolutions over the years. It’s added and removed options on both ends, from one-off experiments with the ultra-cheap Moto G Pure, to the Moto G Stylus and Moto G Power continually trading places as the top option. Sometimes, it means there’s a cheap Motorola device for everyone, but it often leaves me confused about which one to recommend. Not anymore.The $400 Moto G Stylus (2025) is the easiest cheap Motorola phone to recommend, and here’s why. All dressed up in blueRyan Haines / Android AuthorityAlong with Motorola’s uncertainty over how to space its budget Android phones, it’s undergone several design swings over the years. When I started reviewing phones, Motorola was all about vibrant colors with centrally placed camera bumps. I loved almost all of them because they made otherwise cheap phones look and feel more exciting. Then, it seemed like Motorola was content to roll out gray rectangle after gray rectangle, complete with corner-mounted cameras that looked like most other budget-minded Android phones. That mentality seeped out into the mid-range and flagship Edge launches, too, which had me worried about what the future of my favorite Moto designs would look like.Recently, though, Motorola has rediscovered its fun roots. It’s jumped headfirst back into vibrant Pantone colors across all price points, from the top-end Razr Ultra down to the most affordable, and outright bad Moto G (2025). For the 2025 iteration of the Moto G Stylus (there’s only one model this year, so no LTE-only confusion), that means a duo of beautiful blue shades, Gibraltar Sea and Surf The Web, both with vegan leather back panels. I’m glad Motorola sent me Surf The Web, as it’s a bit more of a royal blue than the Gibraltar Sea’s navy blue, but I’d take either one over the muted grays and pale purples that Samsung likes to roll out at this price point. Motorola's partnership with Pantone is making cheap phones fun again. It’s not just the change in color preferences that’s swept Motorola’s recent lineups, though — I think its Moto G designs look better than ever, too. Yes, they’re all at least somewhat inspired by the new Motorola Edge blueprints in the same way that Samsung’s Galaxy A series pulls right from the Galaxy S25 trio, but I think it works out a bit better in Motorola’s favor. Where Samsung’s cheap phones tend to look pretty generic with their simple camera cutouts, the Moto G Stylus could fall anywhere in Motorola’s range, from being the cheap phone it is to tricking you into thinking it’s a flagship Edge device.Outside of the general plastic-ness of the Moto G Stylus, the slow, steady improvement in build quality would almost make you think it’s an Edge device, too. In the past, some of Motorola’s budget offerings have had issues with some flex to the back panels, but I haven’t noticed any of that here. The plastic frame is also rigid enough for me to continue using the phone without a case, though I might imagine that combining a MIL-STD 810H rating against drops and IP68 certification for water and dust adds to some of my budget peace of mind.Of course, I can’t pretend that Motorola’s build quality matches that of its Galaxy A series rivals, as the actual choice of materials really doesn’t. Although Motorola upgraded its durability ratings this time, the Moto G Stylus (2025) is still mostly plastic with just a Gorilla Glass 3 display, while the Galaxy A36 5G puts Corning’s Gorilla Glass Victus Plus on both the front and back. While I think I could probably let this one slip out of my hands once or twice, I’d feel better about slightly tougher glass on most surfaces. And then, there’s the Moto G Stylus’s signature feature — its stylus. These days, it’s pretty much your only option if you want a phone with a built-in stylus but can’t stump up the cash for Samsung’s Galaxy S25 Ultra. Honestly, the level of functionality between the two isn’t much different. Now that Samsung has eliminated Air Actions and the ability to use the S Pen as a remote camera shutter, it’s not much more than a tapping and drawing option, despite costing three times as much.On top of that, Motorola’s stylus controls are, well, easier. When you slip the stylus from its housing at the bottom right corner, it automatically opens a menu with Moto Note, Screenshot, Free-form Crop, and Sketch to Image buttons. The Moto G Stylus also supports a Handwriting Calculator, which is a clever idea that I’ve tried once or twice, but I don’t do enough math to justify its presence, nor is my handwriting good enough for the Snapdragon 6 Gen 3 chipset to differentiate my 7s from my 2s every time.Also, while comparing a $400 Android phone to a $1,300 one in most respects is unfair, I have to give Motorola credit for creating the much more comfortable design here. Samsung’s massive, flat-topped (and bottomed) frame has never been very comfortable to me, whether it had slightly rounded sides or not, yet the Moto G Stylus puts just the right level of roundness around all four sides. It never feels like it’s digging into the palm of my hand, which makes using its 6.7-inch AMOLED much more enjoyable. The display itself is just plain good, too. Motorola stuck with just-okay LCDs for a while not that long ago, so to see it upgrade year after year to the point where it peaks at nearly 1,000 nits brighter than the Galaxy A36 5G and has a slightly higher resolution (444 pixels per inch instead of 385) makes it feel like Motorola has just a little bit more to give to the budget segment right now. Motorola has also more than rectified the awful viewing angles that plagued the Moto G Power a few years ago, making it so that I can comfortably keep an eye on the Moto G Stylus whether I’m working around the kitchen or trying to keep up with NWSL and MLS matches simultaneously.I am, unfortunately for the Moto G Stylus, reviewing a couple of tablets at the same time right now, so it’s been tough to pick a 6.7-inch display as my primary streaming companion, but I’ve been pleased with it as a way to check highlights while running benchmarks on other devices or waste time in Pokémon Go and Stardew Valley, both of which I’ve picked back up after a long, long time away. I also appreciate that this phone still has a headphone jack opposite its stylus on the bottom edge, showing that yes, Samsung, you can have both without losing a 5,000mAh battery.Ryan Haines / Android AuthorityThe last note I have on the Moto G Stylus (2025) design concerns its packaging. In the last few years, Motorola has adopted naturally colored, plastic-free packaging for its Moto G devices and some of its Edge devices, and I expected that to continue this time around. Instead, my review unit arrived in a white box with some slightly shiny text on it, which feels like Motorola going back on a few of its eco-minded goals. I guess packaging doesn’t matter too much in the grand scheme of things, but I liked giving Motorola a green thumbs up for its efforts in the past, and now I can’t tell if I can still do so. Would the real Moto G ‘Power’ please stand up?Ryan Haines / Android AuthorityOf course, building a good-looking budget phone is only half the battle — I’ve praised plenty of cheap designs over the years only to turn around and report that they’re little more than pretty faces. However, what earns the Moto G Stylus points in my book is that it reaches a little bit higher. It combines solid internals with its eye-catching design and ultimately has more of a claim to the Moto G Power name than the Power itself.Specifically, the Moto G Stylus packs a more efficient Snapdragon 6 Gen 3 chipset (built with a 4nm process) instead of the Moto G Power’s Dimensity 6300 chipset (built with a 6nm process). The Stylus also doubles the Power’s base storage with 256GB instead of 128, though both phones allow for expansion via microSD cards and offer matching 8GB of RAM. As always, the spec sheet only tells part of the story, so it’s time to run the Moto G Stylus through our usual set of benchmarks and pick out a few choice rivals. The Moto G Stylus makes good use of its Snapdragon 6 Gen 3 chipset, but its real strength lies in TurboPower charging. So, I stacked up a little bit of everything. I picked out the Moto G Power (2025) to figure out which Motorola phone had the best claim to power, as well as Samsung’s Galaxy A26 5G and A36 5G, the latter of which also uses Qualcomm’s Snapdragon 6 Gen 3 chipset. Then, for good measure, I added Nothing’s Phone 3a Pro, which is a little more expensive but steps up to the Snapdragon 7s Gen 3 chipset for a little more punch. Across the board, the results were… unsurprising, almost to the point of being boring. The Phone 3a Pro set the tone in both single-core and multi-core CPU performance, while the Moto G Stylus and Galaxy A36 5G were neck and neck in second place. The Stylus and both Galaxy devices then jumped past Nothing’s first Pro-grade budget phone (a contradiction if ever I’ve written one) in the more comprehensive PCMark Work test, as did the weaker Moto G Power.Switching over to the graphics side, the 20-run Wild Life stress test put the Phone 3a Pro right back on top of the pile, with the rest of the competitors shaking out in descending order by price. The Moto G Stylus (2025) came up just short of the Galaxy A36 5G but stayed just above the Galaxy A26 5G, all of which easily breezed past the Moto G Power (2025).Ryan Haines / Android AuthorityI’d say the Moto G Stylus’s day-to-day performance mirrors its benchmarking results, too — good and reliable, even if not at the top of the pile. It’s spent most of its time with me as a backup device, coming out mostly when I’d put down the Razr Ultra or Galaxy S25 Edge for an hour or two while reviewing them. Through that, though, it’s responded to almost everything I’ve asked, tackling social media scrolling and mindlessly listening to YouTube playlists through my wired Marshall headphones, simply because I had to use the headphone jack eventually.It has, of course, also come with me as my default Pokémon Go machine, giving me a chance to explore a game I haven’t played since the end of college. Even with the heavy mix of GPS tracking and near-constant graphics usage between the frequent gyms and Pokestops here in the city, the Stylus has taken to my adventures pretty well, only slowing down once or twice on an 80-degree day that would have put a hurting on just about any phone.Ryan Haines / Android AuthorityOne thing you might have expected just a little bit of in a productivity-minded device, though, is an AI feature or two. After all, Motorola just rolled out a new suite of Moto AI improvements to its recent Razr launch, much of which is headed for the Edge lineup, too. Unfortunately, that seems to be where it’s staying for now, as the Moto G Stylus only gets Sketch to Image with its stylus and Circle to Search, which has become as common as Google Lens.Oh, and if you’re after a cheap phone that you can keep for a while, you might not be thrilled to hear that the Moto G Stylus is only in line for two Android updates and a third year of security patches. Samsung’s Galaxy A36 5G will get six years of support at the same price point, and the slightly more expensive Pixel 9a adds a seventh year to the mix. On the bright side, Motorola has cleaned up the bloatware in Hello UX, paring down the Moto G Stylus to a gaming folder and Glance widget by default. You’ll have to uninstall 1Weather, which is annoyingly still here, but it’s easy enough to do.And then, there’s the battery life — the other piece of Motorola’s affordable productivity puzzle. Like most cheap Motorola phones, the Moto G Stylus packs a hearty 5,000mAh cell, and I’ve had no problems putting it through more than a day’s worth of work. Interestingly, our controlled battery drain test would make you think it falls far behind Nothing’s Phone 3a and 3a Pro, but I think the actual performance is about even. I’ve called on it for a slightly different mix of responsibilities in generally hotter weather, but I haven’t faced much battery anxiety. Even if I had, the Moto G Stylus (2025) claims some of the best charging at this price point. In fact, it charges faster than any Galaxy device or Pixel, no matter how much you spend. Motorola packed its top budget offering with blistering 68W wired TurboPower charging and 15W wireless charging for good measure.In my experience, the wired capabilities (with a compatible charger) can get you back on your feet in just a shade under an hour — the same time it takes to fill Nothing’s Phone 3a with a USB PD PPS charger. I did have a little trouble reaching peak speeds before I realized Motorola’s TurboPower block only seems to trust the phone’s included USB-C cable, which has identifiable pink tips, for the full 68W rate. I’m not sure why that is, but it’s something to keep in mind. Sometimes, two cameras are all you needRyan Haines / Android AuthorityWith Motorola’s budget phones pulling increasingly from its flagship Edge lineup, it only makes sense that the Moto G Stylus’s camera bump looks familiar. To my eye, it’s about the same size as the one on the Edge (2025), and it has a similar orientation of three sensors. There’s just one problem, though: The Moto G Stylus (2025) only has two rear cameras. So, that third sensor that sits below the flash is just kind of, well, there for appearances.The good news, at least, is that Motorola chose two pretty solid sensors for its stylus-toting budget phone. The 50MP primary sensor is the same stacked LYTIA 700C that Motorola used on its Edge (2025), and it has popped up on other great camera phones. It delivers some pretty solid results in good lighting. I appreciate that Motorola didn’t simply slap a cheap 50MP sensor on there and call it a day, as the shared sensor means the budget and flagship devices should process images pretty similarly.Motorola’s second shooter is a fairly standard 13MP ultrawide sensor with a 120-degree field of view. This one doesn’t match the sensor on the Edge, though, as you’ll see in a moment, it seems to process its images better than the Razr Ultra did at launch. There’s no weird darkening effect in the sky, nor do I feel like the colors are quite as overblown — they’re punchy, just within more reasonable limits.Anyway, let’s get to some samples. The first row of shots gives you a pretty good idea of how the Moto G Stylus handles a sunny day. There are punchy colors from left to right, whether the subject is up close, like the set of rainbow balloons, or a little further away, like the dry-docked boat on the right side. Thankfully, it doesn’t seem like Motorola is relying on bright colors to cover over worse details, either. It’s easy to pick out individual droplets of rain on the balloons, and you can easily pick out different people walking around the background of Baltimore’s Little Italy Festival.I’m also pleased with the portrait mode detection on the colorful sign I spotted in Washington, DC. Yes, it has pretty well-defined edges, but the Moto G Stylus also blurred the tiny hole in the middle of the sign, a nice touch that other budget phones often miss. This second row offers a similar look at the Moto G Stylus’s color recreation. It makes my brunch ahead of the Grand Slam Track event in Philadelphia look just about as good as it tasted — and it tasted pretty good. Spring is something like street fair season here in Baltimore, so when I found myself with a closed street and a great view of one of the city’s older churches, I had to grab a snap or two. Despite not having a dedicated telephoto sensor, I’m pleased with the central crop from the 50MP primary sensor, and I don’t notice any shift in color profile from 1x zoom. Shifting to the ultrawide sensor — and the software-based macro mode — it seems like Motorola has better control over a consistent color science than in years past. I’ve tested my fair share of Moto G devices that come with significant shifts from the primary sensor to the ultrawide, but I don’t feel like that’s the case here. The 13MP sensor still holds onto decent details from its larger pixels, and the punchier colors bring a little more life to my shots, especially in the flags in front of the Washington Monument.This time, the bright pinks of the hydrangea I captured in macro mode seem to bleed together just a bit. I know there aren’t sharp edges within the flowers themselves, so the Moto G Stylus is adding some sharpening after the fact, and while it works for the water droplets, it emphasizes a few of the wrinkles in the flowers just a little bit too much. I’ve already mentioned the lack of a telephoto sensor, which might hint at how the Moto G Stylus handles longer focal lengths, which is to say that it doesn’t, really. I think the phone is just fine up to about 4x zoom, as the US Capitol still looks sharp enough with okay details in the trees lining the National Mall. I’d feel fine posting that one to my Instagram story without zooming in, though I wouldn’t say the same for the shot at 10x zoom. Yes, it’s still identifiable as the US Capitol, but it feels like a lower-resolution rendering, and I can only pick out the yellow Penske truck in the foreground because I’ve seen the same one a thousand times around the city. Wrapping us up, the Moto G Stylus (2025) has a 32MP punch-hole selfie camera at the top of its 6.7-inch display. It’s perfectly fine for your basic selfie needs — I have no issues with the details in portrait or standard modes, though I’m not sure I love the shift in image processing. I think the standard selfie looks a little more color-accurate, putting a slightly darker shadow onto my shirt, while the portrait shot makes everything seem a little bit brighter. It’s a slight shift, but one that I notice after having taken selfies on so many Android devices. At the very least, Motorola’s portrait detection is spot-on.If you’re eyeing the Moto G Stylus as a cheap video shooter, know that it tops out with 4K recording at 30fps from both the front and rear cameras, though it can also record 1080p footage at 60fps. I mostly stuck to 4K video while walking around the festivals in Baltimore, and I came away pretty impressed with the stabilization in my clips, though I’d have liked to see 4K at 60fps support for $400.You can check out full-resolution versions of all of my camera samples (and several dozen more) at this Google Drive link. Motorola Moto G Stylus (2025) review: The Moto G for most peopleRyan Haines / Android AuthorityIf there’s one cheap Motorola phone worth recommending, it’s this one — simple as that. Yes, the Moto G Power might offer a slightly more durable Gorilla Glass 5 display, but the Moto G Stylus (2025) checks all the other boxes on its way down. It’s more powerful, charges faster, offers better color options (mostly because Surf The Web beats Leaf Green in my book), and comes with the same reliable IP68 certification, even if it skips the IP69 add-on. Oh, and it comes with a built-in stylus for added flexibility, which you can only get from the Galaxy S25 Ultra otherwise.That said, the Moto G Stylus (2025) still suffers from a couple of classic Motorola stumbles. There’s still a bit of bloatware in the form of a gaming folder that you can turn off and 1Weather, which you should immediately uninstall — but at least it’s less bloat than in previous generations. Right now, the bigger problem with recommending a budget-friendly Motorola device is that its software support is second to, well, everyone else. Two Android updates and a third year of security patches aren’t enough when rivals like Samsung offer more than double that, and Google goes to seven years if you pick up a Pixel. The Moto G Stylus is Motorola's best budget phone in a long time… but it's taking on a new class of competitors. And when you put a fairly short expiration date on a $400 Android phone, it becomes much easier to look elsewhere for your next device. Sure, you could look at Motorola’s in-house Moto G Power (2025) ($299.99 at Amazon), which has the same camera strengths, similar lightweight software, and nearly identical vegan leather finishes, but it has the same weaknesses, too. It’s saddled with the same bloatware, the same short update commitment, and drops down to 30W wired charging instead of 68W. That’s still pretty good compared to most options from Samsung and Google, but less exciting when you’ve tried true TurboPower.Outside of the Motorola umbrella, Samsung’s budget-minded Galaxy A series probably makes the most sense. Its Galaxy A36 5G ($399.99 at Amazon) is nearly a perfect match for the Moto G Stylus, so long as you can live without the eponymous feature. The two phones share identical chipsets, matching batteries, and 6.7-inch AMOLED panels, while Samsung’s option adds a third camera to the mix — a dedicated 5MP macro sensor. The Galaxy A36 5G does come out comfortably ahead of the Moto G Stylus in terms of durability, though, sandwiching Gorilla Glass Victus Plus on both sides of its plastic frame. If you live outside the US, you might also want to check out the Nothing Phone 3a ($374 at Amazon) or the Phone 3a Pro ($459.99 at Nothing). They’re almost identical outside their camera bumps, meaning both have Snapdragon 7s Gen 3 chipsets, 6.77-inch displays, and the clever Glyph Interface on the back for notifications and timers. Nothing OS has also been one of our favorite Android skins since the start, bringing a dot-based matrix to most of its widgets while keeping a relatively light, Pixel-like interface. If you need slightly better zoom capability, though, you’ll want to grab the Phone 3a Pro with its larger 50MP telephoto sensor.One last option worth considering is Google’s Pixel 9a ($499 at Amazon), but you’ll have to spend more. If you’re willing to try it, you’ll get the biggest battery available on a Pixel, Google’s latest Tensor G4 chipset (the same one found on all of the flagship Pixels), and seven years of updates that include feature drops. You’ll also get the widest variety of AI-powered features from Google’s mid-ranger, which isn’t something you’ll find on many cheaper Android options. Moto G Stylus (2025)Built-in stylus • Vibrant OLED screen • Fast 68W chargingMSRP: $399.99Doing things in styl-us.The Motorola Moto G Stylus (2025) charges quickly, has decent performance, and comes with a built-in stylus that's way easier than drawing with a fingertip.See price at AmazonPositivesSolid camera optionsExcellent wired chargingConvenient built-in stylusCleaned up bloatwareEye-catching blue finishesImproved AMOLED panelConsUnderwhelming update commitmentCheaper plastic constructionBattery life is decent but not greatReviewsMotorolaMotorola Moto GFollowThank you for being part of our community. Read our Comment Policy before posting.
Ryan Haines / Android Authority
Το Moto G Stylus (2025) είναι επιτέλους ένα οικονομικό τηλέφωνο της Motorola για power users. Αν χρειάζεστε μια φθηνή συσκευή Motorola, αυτή καλύπτει τις περισσότερες ανάγκες σας. Από • 15 Ιουνίου 2025 ••
Το Moto G Stylus (2025) είναι επιτέλους ένα οικονομικό τηλέφωνο της Motorola για power users. Αν χρειάζεστε μια φθηνή συσκευή Motorola, αυτή καλύπτει τις περισσότερες ανάγκες σας. Από • 15 Ιουνίου 2025 ••
Το Moto G Stylus (2025) είναι επιτέλους ένα οικονομικό τηλέφωνο της Motorola για power users. Αν χρειάζεστε μια φθηνή συσκευή Motorola, αυτή καλύπτει τις περισσότερες ανάγκες σας.
Αν χρειάζεστε μια φθηνή συσκευή Motorola, αυτή καλύπτει τις περισσότερες ανάγκες σας.
Moto G Stylus (2025)
Το Moto G Stylus (2025) μοιάζει σαν η Motorola να συγκέντρωσε σχεδόν όλα όσα έχουν λειτουργήσει στις καλύτερες οικονομικές της συσκευές και τα έβαλε σε μία συσκευή. Φορτίζει γρήγορα, αποδίδει καλά και έρχεται με ενσωματωμένο στιλό που είναι πολύ πιο εύκολο από το να σχεδιάζεις με το δάχτυλο. Ζητώ μεγαλύτερη υποστήριξη ενημερώσεων, αλλά κατά τα άλλα, αυτό είναι ένα εξαιρετικό φθηνό τηλέφωνο Android. MSRP: $399.99
Τι μας αρέσει
Σταθερές επιλογές κάμερας
Εξαιρετική ενσύρματη φόρτιση
Βολικό ενσωματωμένο στιλό
Καθαρισμένο από bloatware
Εντυπωσιακά μπλε φινιρίσματα
Βελτιωμένο πάνελ AMOLED
Τι δεν μας αρέσει
Απογοητευτική δέσμευση για ενημερώσεις
Φθηνότερη πλαστική κατασκευή
Η διάρκεια ζωής της μπαταρίας είναι καλή αλλά όχι εξαιρετική
Moto G Stylus (2025)
Το Moto G Stylus (2025) μοιάζει σαν η Motorola να συγκέντρωσε σχεδόν όλα όσα έχουν λειτουργήσει στις καλύτερες οικονομικές της συσκευές και τα έβαλε σε μία συσκευή. Φορτίζει γρήγορα, αποδίδει καλά και έρχεται με ενσωματωμένο στιλό που είναι πολύ πιο εύκολο από το να σχεδιάζεις με το δάχτυλο. Ζητώ μεγαλύτερη υποστήριξη ενημερώσεων, αλλά κατά τα άλλα, αυτό είναι ένα εξαιρετικό φθηνό τηλέφωνο Android.
Το Moto G Stylus (2025) μοιάζει σαν η Motorola να συγκέντρωσε σχεδόν όλα όσα έχουν λειτουργήσει στις καλύτερες οικονομικές της συσκευές και τα έβαλε σε μία συσκευή. Φορτίζει γρήγορα, αποδίδει καλά και έρχεται με ενσωματωμένο στιλό που είναι πολύ πιο εύκολο από το να σχεδιάζεις με το δάχτυλο. Ζητώ μεγαλύτερη υποστήριξη ενημερώσεων, αλλά κατά τα άλλα, αυτό είναι ένα εξαιρετικό φθηνό τηλέφωνο Android.
Τι μας αρέσει
Σταθερές επιλογές κάμερας
Εξαιρετική ενσύρματη φόρτιση
Βολικό ενσωματωμένο στιλό
Καθαρισμένο από bloatware
Εντυπωσιακά μπλε φινιρίσματα
Βελτιωμένο πάνελ AMOLED
Τι δεν μας αρέσει
Απογοητευτική δέσμευση για ενημερώσεις
Φθηνότερη πλαστική κατασκευή
Η διάρκεια ζωής της μπαταρίας είναι καλή αλλά όχι εξαιρετική
Moto G Stylus (2025)The Moto G Stylus (2025) feels like Motorola pulled together almost everything that's worked about its best budget phones and put it into one device. It charges quickly, performs well, and comes with a built-in stylus that's way easier than drawing with a fingertip. I'm begging for longer update support, but otherwise, this is a great cheap Android phone.Motorola’s budget lineup has been through some tricky evolutions over the years. It’s added and removed options on both ends, from one-off experiments with the ultra-cheap Moto G Pure, to the Moto G Stylus and Moto G Power continually trading places as the top option. Sometimes, it means there’s a cheap Motorola device for everyone, but it often leaves me confused about which one to recommend. Not anymore.The $400 Moto G Stylus (2025) is the easiest cheap Motorola phone to recommend, and here’s why. All dressed up in blueRyan Haines / Android AuthorityAlong with Motorola’s uncertainty over how to space its budget Android phones, it’s undergone several design swings over the years. When I started reviewing phones, Motorola was all about vibrant colors with centrally placed camera bumps. I loved almost all of them because they made otherwise cheap phones look and feel more exciting. Then, it seemed like Motorola was content to roll out gray rectangle after gray rectangle, complete with corner-mounted cameras that looked like most other budget-minded Android phones. That mentality seeped out into the mid-range and flagship Edge launches, too, which had me worried about what the future of my favorite Moto designs would look like.Recently, though, Motorola has rediscovered its fun roots. It’s jumped headfirst back into vibrant Pantone colors across all price points, from the top-end Razr Ultra down to the most affordable, and outright bad Moto G (2025). For the 2025 iteration of the Moto G Stylus (there’s only one model this year, so no LTE-only confusion), that means a duo of beautiful blue shades, Gibraltar Sea and Surf The Web, both with vegan leather back panels. I’m glad Motorola sent me Surf The Web, as it’s a bit more of a royal blue than the Gibraltar Sea’s navy blue, but I’d take either one over the muted grays and pale purples that Samsung likes to roll out at this price point. Motorola's partnership with Pantone is making cheap phones fun again. It’s not just the change in color preferences that’s swept Motorola’s recent lineups, though — I think its Moto G designs look better than ever, too. Yes, they’re all at least somewhat inspired by the new Motorola Edge blueprints in the same way that Samsung’s Galaxy A series pulls right from the Galaxy S25 trio, but I think it works out a bit better in Motorola’s favor. Where Samsung’s cheap phones tend to look pretty generic with their simple camera cutouts, the Moto G Stylus could fall anywhere in Motorola’s range, from being the cheap phone it is to tricking you into thinking it’s a flagship Edge device.Outside of the general plastic-ness of the Moto G Stylus, the slow, steady improvement in build quality would almost make you think it’s an Edge device, too. In the past, some of Motorola’s budget offerings have had issues with some flex to the back panels, but I haven’t noticed any of that here. The plastic frame is also rigid enough for me to continue using the phone without a case, though I might imagine that combining a MIL-STD 810H rating against drops and IP68 certification for water and dust adds to some of my budget peace of mind.Of course, I can’t pretend that Motorola’s build quality matches that of its Galaxy A series rivals, as the actual choice of materials really doesn’t. Although Motorola upgraded its durability ratings this time, the Moto G Stylus (2025) is still mostly plastic with just a Gorilla Glass 3 display, while the Galaxy A36 5G puts Corning’s Gorilla Glass Victus Plus on both the front and back. While I think I could probably let this one slip out of my hands once or twice, I’d feel better about slightly tougher glass on most surfaces. And then, there’s the Moto G Stylus’s signature feature — its stylus. These days, it’s pretty much your only option if you want a phone with a built-in stylus but can’t stump up the cash for Samsung’s Galaxy S25 Ultra. Honestly, the level of functionality between the two isn’t much different. Now that Samsung has eliminated Air Actions and the ability to use the S Pen as a remote camera shutter, it’s not much more than a tapping and drawing option, despite costing three times as much.On top of that, Motorola’s stylus controls are, well, easier. When you slip the stylus from its housing at the bottom right corner, it automatically opens a menu with Moto Note, Screenshot, Free-form Crop, and Sketch to Image buttons. The Moto G Stylus also supports a Handwriting Calculator, which is a clever idea that I’ve tried once or twice, but I don’t do enough math to justify its presence, nor is my handwriting good enough for the Snapdragon 6 Gen 3 chipset to differentiate my 7s from my 2s every time.Also, while comparing a $400 Android phone to a $1,300 one in most respects is unfair, I have to give Motorola credit for creating the much more comfortable design here. Samsung’s massive, flat-topped (and bottomed) frame has never been very comfortable to me, whether it had slightly rounded sides or not, yet the Moto G Stylus puts just the right level of roundness around all four sides. It never feels like it’s digging into the palm of my hand, which makes using its 6.7-inch AMOLED much more enjoyable. The display itself is just plain good, too. Motorola stuck with just-okay LCDs for a while not that long ago, so to see it upgrade year after year to the point where it peaks at nearly 1,000 nits brighter than the Galaxy A36 5G and has a slightly higher resolution (444 pixels per inch instead of 385) makes it feel like Motorola has just a little bit more to give to the budget segment right now. Motorola has also more than rectified the awful viewing angles that plagued the Moto G Power a few years ago, making it so that I can comfortably keep an eye on the Moto G Stylus whether I’m working around the kitchen or trying to keep up with NWSL and MLS matches simultaneously.I am, unfortunately for the Moto G Stylus, reviewing a couple of tablets at the same time right now, so it’s been tough to pick a 6.7-inch display as my primary streaming companion, but I’ve been pleased with it as a way to check highlights while running benchmarks on other devices or waste time in Pokémon Go and Stardew Valley, both of which I’ve picked back up after a long, long time away. I also appreciate that this phone still has a headphone jack opposite its stylus on the bottom edge, showing that yes, Samsung, you can have both without losing a 5,000mAh battery.Ryan Haines / Android AuthorityThe last note I have on the Moto G Stylus (2025) design concerns its packaging. In the last few years, Motorola has adopted naturally colored, plastic-free packaging for its Moto G devices and some of its Edge devices, and I expected that to continue this time around. Instead, my review unit arrived in a white box with some slightly shiny text on it, which feels like Motorola going back on a few of its eco-minded goals. I guess packaging doesn’t matter too much in the grand scheme of things, but I liked giving Motorola a green thumbs up for its efforts in the past, and now I can’t tell if I can still do so. Would the real Moto G ‘Power’ please stand up?Ryan Haines / Android AuthorityOf course, building a good-looking budget phone is only half the battle — I’ve praised plenty of cheap designs over the years only to turn around and report that they’re little more than pretty faces. However, what earns the Moto G Stylus points in my book is that it reaches a little bit higher. It combines solid internals with its eye-catching design and ultimately has more of a claim to the Moto G Power name than the Power itself.Specifically, the Moto G Stylus packs a more efficient Snapdragon 6 Gen 3 chipset (built with a 4nm process) instead of the Moto G Power’s Dimensity 6300 chipset (built with a 6nm process). The Stylus also doubles the Power’s base storage with 256GB instead of 128, though both phones allow for expansion via microSD cards and offer matching 8GB of RAM. As always, the spec sheet only tells part of the story, so it’s time to run the Moto G Stylus through our usual set of benchmarks and pick out a few choice rivals. The Moto G Stylus makes good use of its Snapdragon 6 Gen 3 chipset, but its real strength lies in TurboPower charging. So, I stacked up a little bit of everything. I picked out the Moto G Power (2025) to figure out which Motorola phone had the best claim to power, as well as Samsung’s Galaxy A26 5G and A36 5G, the latter of which also uses Qualcomm’s Snapdragon 6 Gen 3 chipset. Then, for good measure, I added Nothing’s Phone 3a Pro, which is a little more expensive but steps up to the Snapdragon 7s Gen 3 chipset for a little more punch. Across the board, the results were… unsurprising, almost to the point of being boring. The Phone 3a Pro set the tone in both single-core and multi-core CPU performance, while the Moto G Stylus and Galaxy A36 5G were neck and neck in second place. The Stylus and both Galaxy devices then jumped past Nothing’s first Pro-grade budget phone (a contradiction if ever I’ve written one) in the more comprehensive PCMark Work test, as did the weaker Moto G Power.Switching over to the graphics side, the 20-run Wild Life stress test put the Phone 3a Pro right back on top of the pile, with the rest of the competitors shaking out in descending order by price. The Moto G Stylus (2025) came up just short of the Galaxy A36 5G but stayed just above the Galaxy A26 5G, all of which easily breezed past the Moto G Power (2025).Ryan Haines / Android AuthorityI’d say the Moto G Stylus’s day-to-day performance mirrors its benchmarking results, too — good and reliable, even if not at the top of the pile. It’s spent most of its time with me as a backup device, coming out mostly when I’d put down the Razr Ultra or Galaxy S25 Edge for an hour or two while reviewing them. Through that, though, it’s responded to almost everything I’ve asked, tackling social media scrolling and mindlessly listening to YouTube playlists through my wired Marshall headphones, simply because I had to use the headphone jack eventually.It has, of course, also come with me as my default Pokémon Go machine, giving me a chance to explore a game I haven’t played since the end of college. Even with the heavy mix of GPS tracking and near-constant graphics usage between the frequent gyms and Pokestops here in the city, the Stylus has taken to my adventures pretty well, only slowing down once or twice on an 80-degree day that would have put a hurting on just about any phone.Ryan Haines / Android AuthorityOne thing you might have expected just a little bit of in a productivity-minded device, though, is an AI feature or two. After all, Motorola just rolled out a new suite of Moto AI improvements to its recent Razr launch, much of which is headed for the Edge lineup, too. Unfortunately, that seems to be where it’s staying for now, as the Moto G Stylus only gets Sketch to Image with its stylus and Circle to Search, which has become as common as Google Lens.Oh, and if you’re after a cheap phone that you can keep for a while, you might not be thrilled to hear that the Moto G Stylus is only in line for two Android updates and a third year of security patches. Samsung’s Galaxy A36 5G will get six years of support at the same price point, and the slightly more expensive Pixel 9a adds a seventh year to the mix. On the bright side, Motorola has cleaned up the bloatware in Hello UX, paring down the Moto G Stylus to a gaming folder and Glance widget by default. You’ll have to uninstall 1Weather, which is annoyingly still here, but it’s easy enough to do.And then, there’s the battery life — the other piece of Motorola’s affordable productivity puzzle. Like most cheap Motorola phones, the Moto G Stylus packs a hearty 5,000mAh cell, and I’ve had no problems putting it through more than a day’s worth of work. Interestingly, our controlled battery drain test would make you think it falls far behind Nothing’s Phone 3a and 3a Pro, but I think the actual performance is about even. I’ve called on it for a slightly different mix of responsibilities in generally hotter weather, but I haven’t faced much battery anxiety. Even if I had, the Moto G Stylus (2025) claims some of the best charging at this price point. In fact, it charges faster than any Galaxy device or Pixel, no matter how much you spend. Motorola packed its top budget offering with blistering 68W wired TurboPower charging and 15W wireless charging for good measure.In my experience, the wired capabilities (with a compatible charger) can get you back on your feet in just a shade under an hour — the same time it takes to fill Nothing’s Phone 3a with a USB PD PPS charger. I did have a little trouble reaching peak speeds before I realized Motorola’s TurboPower block only seems to trust the phone’s included USB-C cable, which has identifiable pink tips, for the full 68W rate. I’m not sure why that is, but it’s something to keep in mind. Sometimes, two cameras are all you needRyan Haines / Android AuthorityWith Motorola’s budget phones pulling increasingly from its flagship Edge lineup, it only makes sense that the Moto G Stylus’s camera bump looks familiar. To my eye, it’s about the same size as the one on the Edge (2025), and it has a similar orientation of three sensors. There’s just one problem, though: The Moto G Stylus (2025) only has two rear cameras. So, that third sensor that sits below the flash is just kind of, well, there for appearances.The good news, at least, is that Motorola chose two pretty solid sensors for its stylus-toting budget phone. The 50MP primary sensor is the same stacked LYTIA 700C that Motorola used on its Edge (2025), and it has popped up on other great camera phones. It delivers some pretty solid results in good lighting. I appreciate that Motorola didn’t simply slap a cheap 50MP sensor on there and call it a day, as the shared sensor means the budget and flagship devices should process images pretty similarly.Motorola’s second shooter is a fairly standard 13MP ultrawide sensor with a 120-degree field of view. This one doesn’t match the sensor on the Edge, though, as you’ll see in a moment, it seems to process its images better than the Razr Ultra did at launch. There’s no weird darkening effect in the sky, nor do I feel like the colors are quite as overblown — they’re punchy, just within more reasonable limits.Anyway, let’s get to some samples. The first row of shots gives you a pretty good idea of how the Moto G Stylus handles a sunny day. There are punchy colors from left to right, whether the subject is up close, like the set of rainbow balloons, or a little further away, like the dry-docked boat on the right side. Thankfully, it doesn’t seem like Motorola is relying on bright colors to cover over worse details, either. It’s easy to pick out individual droplets of rain on the balloons, and you can easily pick out different people walking around the background of Baltimore’s Little Italy Festival.I’m also pleased with the portrait mode detection on the colorful sign I spotted in Washington, DC. Yes, it has pretty well-defined edges, but the Moto G Stylus also blurred the tiny hole in the middle of the sign, a nice touch that other budget phones often miss. This second row offers a similar look at the Moto G Stylus’s color recreation. It makes my brunch ahead of the Grand Slam Track event in Philadelphia look just about as good as it tasted — and it tasted pretty good. Spring is something like street fair season here in Baltimore, so when I found myself with a closed street and a great view of one of the city’s older churches, I had to grab a snap or two. Despite not having a dedicated telephoto sensor, I’m pleased with the central crop from the 50MP primary sensor, and I don’t notice any shift in color profile from 1x zoom. Shifting to the ultrawide sensor — and the software-based macro mode — it seems like Motorola has better control over a consistent color science than in years past. I’ve tested my fair share of Moto G devices that come with significant shifts from the primary sensor to the ultrawide, but I don’t feel like that’s the case here. The 13MP sensor still holds onto decent details from its larger pixels, and the punchier colors bring a little more life to my shots, especially in the flags in front of the Washington Monument.This time, the bright pinks of the hydrangea I captured in macro mode seem to bleed together just a bit. I know there aren’t sharp edges within the flowers themselves, so the Moto G Stylus is adding some sharpening after the fact, and while it works for the water droplets, it emphasizes a few of the wrinkles in the flowers just a little bit too much. I’ve already mentioned the lack of a telephoto sensor, which might hint at how the Moto G Stylus handles longer focal lengths, which is to say that it doesn’t, really. I think the phone is just fine up to about 4x zoom, as the US Capitol still looks sharp enough with okay details in the trees lining the National Mall. I’d feel fine posting that one to my Instagram story without zooming in, though I wouldn’t say the same for the shot at 10x zoom. Yes, it’s still identifiable as the US Capitol, but it feels like a lower-resolution rendering, and I can only pick out the yellow Penske truck in the foreground because I’ve seen the same one a thousand times around the city. Wrapping us up, the Moto G Stylus (2025) has a 32MP punch-hole selfie camera at the top of its 6.7-inch display. It’s perfectly fine for your basic selfie needs — I have no issues with the details in portrait or standard modes, though I’m not sure I love the shift in image processing. I think the standard selfie looks a little more color-accurate, putting a slightly darker shadow onto my shirt, while the portrait shot makes everything seem a little bit brighter. It’s a slight shift, but one that I notice after having taken selfies on so many Android devices. At the very least, Motorola’s portrait detection is spot-on.If you’re eyeing the Moto G Stylus as a cheap video shooter, know that it tops out with 4K recording at 30fps from both the front and rear cameras, though it can also record 1080p footage at 60fps. I mostly stuck to 4K video while walking around the festivals in Baltimore, and I came away pretty impressed with the stabilization in my clips, though I’d have liked to see 4K at 60fps support for $400.You can check out full-resolution versions of all of my camera samples (and several dozen more) at this Google Drive link. Motorola Moto G Stylus (2025) review: The Moto G for most peopleRyan Haines / Android AuthorityIf there’s one cheap Motorola phone worth recommending, it’s this one — simple as that. Yes, the Moto G Power might offer a slightly more durable Gorilla Glass 5 display, but the Moto G Stylus (2025) checks all the other boxes on its way down. It’s more powerful, charges faster, offers better color options (mostly because Surf The Web beats Leaf Green in my book), and comes with the same reliable IP68 certification, even if it skips the IP69 add-on. Oh, and it comes with a built-in stylus for added flexibility, which you can only get from the Galaxy S25 Ultra otherwise.That said, the Moto G Stylus (2025) still suffers from a couple of classic Motorola stumbles. There’s still a bit of bloatware in the form of a gaming folder that you can turn off and 1Weather, which you should immediately uninstall — but at least it’s less bloat than in previous generations. Right now, the bigger problem with recommending a budget-friendly Motorola device is that its software support is second to, well, everyone else. Two Android updates and a third year of security patches aren’t enough when rivals like Samsung offer more than double that, and Google goes to seven years if you pick up a Pixel. The Moto G Stylus is Motorola's best budget phone in a long time… but it's taking on a new class of competitors. And when you put a fairly short expiration date on a $400 Android phone, it becomes much easier to look elsewhere for your next device. Sure, you could look at Motorola’s in-house Moto G Power (2025) ($299.99 at Amazon), which has the same camera strengths, similar lightweight software, and nearly identical vegan leather finishes, but it has the same weaknesses, too. It’s saddled with the same bloatware, the same short update commitment, and drops down to 30W wired charging instead of 68W. That’s still pretty good compared to most options from Samsung and Google, but less exciting when you’ve tried true TurboPower.Outside of the Motorola umbrella, Samsung’s budget-minded Galaxy A series probably makes the most sense. Its Galaxy A36 5G ($399.99 at Amazon) is nearly a perfect match for the Moto G Stylus, so long as you can live without the eponymous feature. The two phones share identical chipsets, matching batteries, and 6.7-inch AMOLED panels, while Samsung’s option adds a third camera to the mix — a dedicated 5MP macro sensor. The Galaxy A36 5G does come out comfortably ahead of the Moto G Stylus in terms of durability, though, sandwiching Gorilla Glass Victus Plus on both sides of its plastic frame. If you live outside the US, you might also want to check out the Nothing Phone 3a ($374 at Amazon) or the Phone 3a Pro ($459.99 at Nothing). They’re almost identical outside their camera bumps, meaning both have Snapdragon 7s Gen 3 chipsets, 6.77-inch displays, and the clever Glyph Interface on the back for notifications and timers. Nothing OS has also been one of our favorite Android skins since the start, bringing a dot-based matrix to most of its widgets while keeping a relatively light, Pixel-like interface. If you need slightly better zoom capability, though, you’ll want to grab the Phone 3a Pro with its larger 50MP telephoto sensor.One last option worth considering is Google’s Pixel 9a ($499 at Amazon), but you’ll have to spend more. If you’re willing to try it, you’ll get the biggest battery available on a Pixel, Google’s latest Tensor G4 chipset (the same one found on all of the flagship Pixels), and seven years of updates that include feature drops. You’ll also get the widest variety of AI-powered features from Google’s mid-ranger, which isn’t something you’ll find on many cheaper Android options. Moto G Stylus (2025)Built-in stylus • Vibrant OLED screen • Fast 68W chargingMSRP: $399.99Doing things in styl-us.The Motorola Moto G Stylus (2025) charges quickly, has decent performance, and comes with a built-in stylus that's way easier than drawing with a fingertip.See price at AmazonPositivesSolid camera optionsExcellent wired chargingConvenient built-in stylusCleaned up bloatwareEye-catching blue finishesImproved AMOLED panelConsUnderwhelming update commitmentCheaper plastic constructionBattery life is decent but not greatReviewsMotorolaMotorola Moto GFollowThank you for being part of our community. 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Η συνεργασία της Motorola με την Pantone κάνει τα φθηνά τηλέφωνα ξανά διασκεδαστικά.
Το Moto G Stylus αξιοποιεί καλά το Snapdragon 6 Gen 3 chipset του, αλλά η πραγματική του δύναμη έγκειται στη φόρτιση TurboPower.
Ανασκόπηση του Motorola Moto G Stylus (2025): Το Moto G για τους περισσότερους ανθρώπους
Το Moto G Stylus είναι το καλύτερο οικονομικό τηλέφωνο της Motorola εδώ και πολύ καιρό… αλλά αντιμετωπίζει μια νέα κατηγορία ανταγωνιστών.
Moto G Stylus (2025)Ενσωματωμένη γραφίδα • Ζωντανή οθόνη OLED • Γρήγορη φόρτιση 68WMSRP: $399.99Κάνοντας πράγματα με στιλ.Το Motorola Moto G Stylus (2025) φορτίζει γρήγορα, έχει αξιοπρεπή απόδοση και διαθέτει ενσωματωμένη γραφίδα που είναι πολύ πιο εύκολη από το να σχεδιάζεις με την άκρη του δακτύλου.Δείτε την τιμή στο AmazonΘετικάΣταθερές επιλογές κάμεραςΕξαιρετική ενσύρματη φόρτισηΒολική ενσωματωμένη γραφίδαΚαθαρισμένο λογισμικόΕντυπωσιακά μπλε φινιρίσματαΒελτιωμένο πάνελ AMOLEDΑρνητικάΑπογοητευτική δέσμευση για ενημερώσειςΦθηνότερη πλαστική κατασκευήΗ διάρκεια ζωής της μπαταρίας είναι αξιοπρεπής αλλά όχι εξαιρετική
Moto G Stylus (2025)Ενσωματωμένη γραφίδα • Ζωντανή οθόνη OLED • Γρήγορη φόρτιση 68WMSRP: $399.99Κάνοντας πράγματα με στιλ.Το Motorola Moto G Stylus (2025) φορτίζει γρήγορα, έχει αξιοπρεπή απόδοση και διαθέτει ενσωματωμένη γραφίδα που είναι πολύ πιο εύκολη από το να σχεδιάζεις με την άκρη του δακτύλου.
Ενσωματωμένη γραφίδα • Ζωντανή οθόνη OLED • Γρήγορη φόρτιση 68W
Το Motorola Moto G Stylus (2025) φορτίζει γρήγορα, έχει αξιοπρεπή απόδοση και διαθέτει ενσωματωμένη γραφίδα που είναι πολύ πιο εύκολη από το να σχεδιάζεις με την άκρη του δακτύλου.
Δείτε την τιμή στο AmazonΘετικάΣταθερές επιλογές κάμεραςΕξαιρετική ενσύρματη φόρτισηΒολική ενσωματωμένη γραφίδαΚαθαρισμένο λογισμικόΕντυπωσιακά μπλε φινιρίσματαΒελτιωμένο πάνελ AMOLEDΑρνητικάΑπογοητευτική δέσμευση για ενημερώσειςΦθηνότερη πλαστική κατασκευήΗ διάρκεια ζωής της μπαταρίας είναι αξιοπρεπής αλλά όχι εξαιρετική
ΘετικάΣταθερές επιλογές κάμεραςΕξαιρετική ενσύρματη φόρτισηΒολική ενσωματωμένη γραφίδαΚαθαρισμένο λογισμικόΕντυπωσιακά μπλε φινιρίσματαΒελτιωμένο πάνελ AMOLED
ΑρνητικάΑπογοητευτική δέσμευση για ενημερώσειςΦθηνότερη πλαστική κατασκευήΗ διάρκεια ζωής της μπαταρίας είναι αξιοπρεπής αλλά όχι εξαιρετική