Motorola Moto G 4G review: Going fast

Going fast

GSMArena team, 31 August 2014.

Synthetic benchmarks

Motorola Moto G 4G is running on an LTE-enabled mid-range Snapdragon 400 chipset. It offers four Cortex-A7 CPU cores, Adreno 305 graphics and 1GB of RAM. We've already seen the chipset in action on lots of smartphone, including the original Moto G, so it's clearly a quite popular choice. And rightfully so as it delivers a snappy performance in everyday use and quite acceptable gaming as well.

Starting off with the CPU benchmarks, the Moto G 4G posted a great result on the multi-core GeekBench 3 cross-platform benchmark. The Moto G 4G matched the performance of the Moto G, LG G2 mini and even bettered Xperia M2.

GeekBench 3

Higher is better

  • HTC One mini 2
    1526
  • HTC Desire 816
    1510
  • Sony Xperia T3
    1373
  • Sony Xperia T2 Ultra
    1359
  • Motorola Moto G 4G
    1175
  • LG G2 mini
    1123
  • Motorola Moto G
    1120
  • Sony Xperia M2 Aqua
    1106
  • Sony Xperia M2
    1074
  • Motorola Moto E
    611

AnTuTu is a compound benchmark, which also takes into account RAM and GPU performance. The Moto G 4G numbers are quite good, slightly better than the Moto G, LG G2 mini and HTC One mini 2.

AnTuTu 4

Higher is better

  • HTC Desire 816
    21580
  • Sony Xperia T3
    20282
  • Sony Xperia T2 Ultra
    19896
  • Sony Xperia M2 Aqua
    18829
  • Motorola Moto G 4G
    18047
  • HTC One mini 2
    17883
  • Sony Xperia M2
    17808
  • LG G2 mini
    17362
  • Motorola Moto G
    17214
  • Motorola Moto E
    12880

Basemark OS II is another all-round benchmark. It gives an overall score along with single, multi-core performance, math performance and more. We focus on the overall score and the dedicated CPU scores. The Motorola Moto G 4G overall rating is OK - on par with the competition. The singe-core and multi-core performance put it very close to the Snapdragon 400-powered HTC One mini 2 an Sony Xperia M2.

Basemark OS II

Higher is better

  • Motorola Moto G
    559
  • Sony Xperia T3
    535
  • HTC Desire 816
    520
  • HTC One mini 2
    517
  • Motorola Moto G 4G
    495
  • Sony Xperia M2 Aqua
    452
  • Sony Xperia T2 Ultra
    434
  • Sony Xperia M2
    298
  • Motorola Moto E
    116

Basemark OS II (single-core)

Higher is better

  • HTC Desire 816
    1739
  • Sony Xperia T3
    1465
  • HTC One mini 2
    1304
  • Motorola Moto G 4G
    1192
  • Sony Xperia M2
    1164
  • Sony Xperia M2 Aqua
    1131
  • Motorola Moto E
    1110

Basemark OS II (multi-core)

Higher is better

  • HTC Desire 816
    7071
  • Sony Xperia T3
    5759
  • HTC One mini 2
    5182
  • Motorola Moto G 4G
    5012
  • Sony Xperia M2
    4927
  • Sony Xperia M2 Aqua
    4887
  • Motorola Moto E
    2637

The graphics benchmark results did come OK. The GFXBench tests - both off-screen and on-screen variants - reflected above average performance. It did better on the off-screen tests but falls behind the lower resolution devices on the on-screen tests such as the Sony Xperia M2, M2 Aqua and LG G2 mini.

GFX 2.7 T-Rex (1080p offscreen)

Higher is better

  • Sony Xperia M2 Aqua
    6
  • Sony Xperia T3
    5.9
  • Sony Xperia M2
    5.9
  • HTC Desire 816
    5.9
  • Motorola Moto G 4G
    5.8
  • Sony Xperia T2 Ultra
    5.8
  • LG G2 mini
    5.8
  • HTC One mini 2
    5.8
  • Motorola Moto G
    5.6
  • Motorola Moto E
    4.5

GFX 2.7 T-Rex (onscreen)

Higher is better

  • Sony Xperia M2 Aqua
    15.5
  • Sony Xperia M2
    15.4
  • LG G2 mini
    14.9
  • Motorola Moto E
    11.2
  • Sony Xperia T3
    11.2
  • HTC One mini 2
    11
  • HTC Desire 816
    11
  • Sony Xperia T2 Ultra
    10.9
  • Motorola Moto G 4G
    10.8

GFX 3.0 Manhattan (1080p offscreen)

Higher is better

  • Sony Xperia M2
    1.9
  • Sony Xperia T3
    1.8
  • Motorola Moto G 4G
    1.7
  • HTC One mini 2
    1.7
  • Sony Xperia M2 Aqua
    1.7
  • HTC Desire 816
    1.7
  • Motorola Moto E
    1.4

GFX 3.0 Manhattan (onscreen)

Higher is better

  • Sony Xperia M2
    6.9
  • Sony Xperia M2 Aqua
    6.9
  • Motorola Moto E
    4.9
  • Sony Xperia T3
    4.2
  • Sony Xperia T2 Ultra
    4.1
  • Motorola Moto G 4G
    4
  • HTC Desire 816
    3.9
  • HTC One mini 2
    3.8

The BrowserMark 2.1 tests HTML 5 performance, while Mozilla's Kraken 1.1 is JavaScript-centric. The Motorola Moto G 4G managed a great score in BrowserMark and came on par with its siblings on Kraken.

Kraken 1.1

Lower is better

  • HTC Desire 816
    13564
  • Sony Xperia T3
    13738
  • HTC One mini 2
    15684
  • Motorola Moto G 4G
    16118
  • Sony Xperia M2 Aqua
    16129
  • Motorola Moto E
    17213
  • Sony Xperia M2
    18047

BrowserMark 2.1

Higher is better

  • Sony Xperia T3
    978
  • HTC One mini 2
    945
  • Motorola Moto G 4G
    911
  • Sony Xperia M2
    903
  • Sony Xperia M2 Aqua
    883
  • Motorola Moto E
    784
  • HTC Desire 816
    774

Moto G 4G and its Snapdragon 400 chipset offers good overall performance. It may not top any charts, but what's really matters is real-life usage and it is great. The Android OS is as smooth as butter with no lag whatsoever, while most of the popular games run just fine.

Reader comments

  • Anonymous
  • 01 Dec 2015
  • Hkt

Nice

  • Tuione
  • 05 Sep 2015
  • vxD

I have been using this phone since Feb 2015. For the price I paid (NZD$230), I am very happy with this phone.. Best display in this price range, really loud speakers which gives good quality sound. Fast update to Android 5.1.2 in NZ. Everything else...

  • AnonD-50641
  • 10 Aug 2015
  • tZ4

Had been using it for almost a year. With every tuning possible. This phone can only achieve SOT 3 hrs max with just only 25% Brightness (brighter than most rivals).