“The new Moto G Stylus is the best Moto G phone this year, offering good hardware, a lovely display, and plenty of extra features at a great price.”
- Leather back looks and feels great
- Very nice OLED display
- Two-day battery life
- Solid charging options
- Face unlock is excellent
- Expandable storage
- Annoying and intrusive ads
- Will get just one OS update
- Fierce competition
This year hasn’t been a good one for the Moto G family. In 2024, Motorola has released three new Moto G phones in the U.S. so far, and none of them have been particularly noteworthy. In fact, some of them have been quite bad.
The Moto G Stylus
What I love about the new Moto G Stylus
I’ve been using the new Moto G Stylus as my daily
Similar to other Moto Gs released this year, the Moto G Stylus
Beyond the good look and feel of the phone, it’s also rounded out with a few niceties. There’s a 3.5mm headphone jack, expandable storage of up to 2TB via a MicroSD card, and an IP52 rating for dust/water resistance.
There’s also an in-screen fingerprint sensor that’s worked well for me, but what I particularly love is the face unlock. Not only does it work for unlocking the lock screen, but it can also be used to unlock sensitive apps on the phone (like banking apps and password managers). It’s fast, reliable, and has worked shockingly well for me.
The phone feels sturdy, and the leather back makes it extremely grippy.
I’ve also been impressed by the phone’s display. The 6.7-inch OLED panel is a massive upgrade over the LCD screen on the Moto G Power 5G (2024). It has vibrant colors, dark blacks, very good viewing angles, and plenty of brightness — even outdoors in direct sunlight. The Full HD+ resolution (2400 x 1080 pixels) looks great, as does the 120Hz refresh rate. My only complaint about the display is the Gorilla Glass 3 covering it, which has already picked up a few scratches after a couple of weeks of use.
Speaking of having little to complain about, let’s talk battery life. It’s great! The Moto G Stylus
When the battery does run dry, the Moto G Stylus
Performance, cameras, and the stylus
Powering the Moto G Stylus
Scrolling through apps is smooth, Marvel Snap at Medium graphics and 60 frames per second (fps) plays just fine, and other apps like Microsoft Teams, YouTube, and Duolingo run without a problem. It’s certainly not the fastest phone I’ve ever used, and I have run into occasional stutters/slowdowns here and there, but it’s been nothing but a minor inconvenience.
What about the cameras? What about the cameras, indeed. This is often a low point for any budget
The new Moto G Stylus has a 50-megapixel primary camera, a 13MP ultrawide camera with a 120-degree field of view (FOV), and a 32MP selfie camera. The ultrawide camera also enables Macro Vision to function as a pseudo-macro camera. And you know what? The phone can actually take pretty decent pictures.
The 50MP main camera is the highlight here. It captures sharp, good-looking photos that — for the most part — I’ve been happy with. Colors are often more saturated than I’d prefer, but that’s really my biggest complaint about it. It’s a good, dependable camera sensor that I’ve taken numerous good pictures with.
Less impressive is the 13MP ultrawide camera. I appreciate how much wider of a view it provides with the 120-degree FOV, but the image quality just isn’t there. Photos from the ultrawide camera look fine at first glance, but inspect them any closer, and you’ll quickly see how unimpressive they are. Images look bland, overly sharpened, and often have drastically different colors compared to the same scene captured with the main camera. It works in a pinch, but it’s not particularly good.
Finally, let’s talk about the stylus. Like on previous Moto G Stylus phones, the stylus is tucked away in the bottom-right frame and is completely hidden when you don’t want to use it. When you want to take handwritten notes/draw/doodle/etc., simply press the head of the stylus and slide it out.
Removing the stylus displays a customizable pop-up menu that offers shortcuts to take a note, capture a screenshot, use a handwriting calculator, and more. You can remove any shortcuts you don’t want and add new ones, including shortcuts to any apps installed on the phone. This is not an active or Bluetooth stylus, meaning it does not have pressure sensitivity, remote button functions, etc. Instead, it’s a basic passive stylus that interacts with the touchscreen and nothing more.
I’ve enjoyed using the stylus to navigate apps and menus on the phone. It’s smooth and precise, and sometimes it’s just more enjoyable to use than your fingers. Unfortunately, it’s not particularly good for anything beyond that.
The tip on the stylus is extremely smooth, and when you use it on the phone’s display, it feels like it’s sliding across a sheet of ice. This is fine for simple navigation, but if you’re trying to draw or write, it feels very unnatural. There also doesn’t appear to be any sort of palm rejection. If I rest my hand on the Moto G Stylus to take a note, and part of my hand touches the screen before the stylus does, the stylus doesn’t do anything until I pick my hand up off the screen and ensure that the stylus touches the screen first before anything else does.
The Moto G Stylus’ two biggest issues
As the subhead suggests, it’s time to talk about some of the Moto G Stylus’ … less desirable traits. There are two main issues I have with the phone, and in my opinion, they’re pretty significant ones.
The first is ads. When you’re setting up the Moto G Stylus
The Weather app takes over the Moto Widget, which is on your home screen by default andshows the time and weather. When you tap on the weather here or open the Weather app in your app drawer, you’re presented with the slowest, ugliest, most ad-ridden nightmare of a weather app. It’s bad. Similarly, those “folders” — which disguise themselves as premade folders for your own apps — are nothing but app advertisements. (You can see a photo of one of these above.)
Also on the phone is Glance. While I wasn’t prompted to use it while setting up the Moto G Stylus, a pop-up for it often appeared in the Settings app. When enabled, Glance displays news articles, weather information, and sports scores on your lock screen. It looks bad, the types of news articles are all over the place, and it adds nothing of value to the phone.
Can you set up the Moto G Stylus without downloading or using any of this stuff? You can, but you really need to know what to look for during the setup process. The vast majority of people buying the Moto G Stylus
The other big issue with the Moto G Stylus
Although this is not a new issue for Motorola, it remains one of the most frustrating. In a world where other phones in this price bracket are promised anywhere from four to seven
It’s not just an issue of missing out on future new features in
Moto G Stylus 5G (2024) price and availability
The Moto G Stylus
While $400 is a very good price, it’s also one with a lot of competition. The Samsung Galaxy A35 is also available for $400 and has a higher IP67 rating, a fun main camera, a similarly great AMOLED display, and a vastly superior update policy — specifically, four
Additionally, paying an extra $100 gets you the Google Pixel 8a. The battery only lasts for a day, and the charging speeds are slower, but it also has a lot of advantages. The Pixel 8a has a much better camera system, clean software, helpful AI photo-editing features, and seven years of updates — an unmatched level of software support for a phone in this price range. That extra $100 could also get you the OnePlus 12R, which is one of the best smartphones released this year.
Should you buy the Moto G Stylus 5G (2024)?
Compared to other Moto G releases this year, the Moto G Stylus
I really like the Moto G Stylus
Of course, there’s the issue of competition. Whether it’s the Galaxy A35, the Pixel 8a, or the OnePlus 12R, the fact is that you can spend the same amount or a little bit more money on really good alternatives. It’s also difficult to give Motorola a pass for the ads, bloatware, and limited software support. These are all things Motorola could very easily address, and the longer it doesn’t, the worse of a position it puts Motorola’s budget phones in.
I really like the Moto G Stylus
That said, I can’t deny that I genuinely enjoyed using the Moto G Stylus