Motorola Moto G10 review
Competition
Unlike in the US market, where Motorola is one of the few makers to offer decent low-end to mid-range phones, the company is facing quite a bit of competition elsewhere. And since the Moto G10 can't be found on US soil, at least for now, we can go on with competition originating from Asia, which is absent from the US, too.
The first phone to consider in the €140 ballpark would be the recently released Xiaomi Redmi 9T. To be honest, though, this is where we should probably end this review because the 9T has so much to offer for the same asking price. It has a brighter, higher resolution display, great-sounding stereo speakers, bigger battery (although it scored just a little better than the G10), faster charging, undoubtedly better camera performance and a set of useful features like an IR blaster, dedicated microSD card slot (not shared) and reverse wired charging to take full advantage of the huge 6,000 mAh unit. The overall design of the phone and ergonomics are also better, but that's strongly subjective.
Another Chinese competitor worth mentioning is the Realme 7i, which matches the Moto G10's screen resolution but offers a more fluid 90Hz panel giving you the impression of smoother operation. NFC is out of the question, and it's a bit pricier, too, asking around €160-170.
Xiaomi Redmi 9T • Realme 7i • OnePlus Nord N100 • Motorola Moto G30
A more popular choice comes straight from South Korea - the Galaxy A21s. This device offers comparable hardware with superior camera performance and more mature One UI software. A considerably brighter screen is also ensured. Sadly, here's where the advantages end because the Moto G10 excels in battery endurance and edges out in memory. The Galaxy A21s would give you just 2GB of RAM and 32GB of storage for the same asking price. The Moto will give you double that.
And then we have the Moto G30 representing in-house competition. The handset is priced just about €30 more, but we definitely think it's worth it as long as you are dead set on getting a Moto-branded phone. The more expensive sibling offers a snappier chipset, similar battery life, brighter display with a higher refresh rate, faster charging and overall better camera performance. In short, despite being a bit pricier, the Moto G30 offers better value for your money. Lowering the price tag on the G10 will separate the two enough so users may start considering the G10 over the G30, but at this point in time, it makes no sense to prefer the former over the latter.
Want to stick with the burden-less Android feel? Why not give the OnePlus Nord N100 a try. We found this one outside of OnePlus' official store for a lot less than €189. It's priced just around the €140 mark at third-party retailers and offers similar hardware - 6.52-inch, 720p screen, Snapdragon 460, 4GB/64GB memory configuration and 5,000 mAh battery. But the devil is in the details. The display is 90Hz, the storage is of the snapper UFS 2.1 kind, the battery supports faster 18W charging, the front panel is protected by a Gorilla Glass 3, and there's a set of stereo loudspeakers as a bonus. It's hard to tell whether the camera experience would be any better given that we haven't tested it, but we would guess it's going to be about the same or somewhat inferior due to the aged 13MP main sensor with smaller f/2.2 aperture. There's also no ultrawide camera, although that would not be enough to tip the scales seeing how the Moto G10's ultrawide snapper performs.
Verdict
The Moto G10 would have been a great all-rounder some time ago. But even the low-end smartphone market has evolved, and now the hardware at hand doesn't impress. In fact, it seems to be lacking against some of the competition. And we are not talking about the pressure from the Chinese brands only. Sure, the Redmi 9T and the OnePlus Nord N100 are viable options to pursue, but we are mostly puzzled by the decision to space the Moto G30 and the G10 pricing by just €30.
Spending a few more bucks for the Moto G30 will get you a long way as it has a better camera, faster charging and a more capable chipset. That's, of course, if you are dead set on Motorola. Otherwise, the Realme 9T offers a lot more for the same price as the Moto G10. So if Motorola wants this handset to sell well, it needs to introduce a price cut before we can recommend it to buyers over the competition.
Pros
- Nice, unorthodox design
- Amazing battery life
- Dependable main camera in daytime
- Clean Android 11 experience with a few value-adding extra features
- Video recording is above average for the class
Cons
- UI feels rather slow
- Slow charging
- You can get better performing chipsets in the same price segment
- Disappointing main camera performance at night
- Camera resolution management in the camera app is a mess
Reader comments
- murdock
- 27 Feb 2024
- mpy
after using this phone over 2 years now I can only say, yes it hasn't got the best camera (not one Moto I owned had), can be a bit sluggish at times, but it's been over 2 years and i can't count how many times it fell down to the groun...
- Anonymous
- 26 Jun 2023
- Bkf
The Motorola G10 get really sluggish if you have too many apps installed. What "too many" means is not readily available, but it's a number that doesn't give the Samsung S10 Lite any pause. I may be down to the amount of RAM, but ...
- DoneOver
- 27 Oct 2021
- 0U4
No specs or price worth Xiaomi MIUI, after experience with Redmi9 - mandatory permissions, inc location, monitoring, tracking, harvesting your personal information, recording calls(turn off data, before making phone calls!) Other 100%Chinese company ...