Motorola Moto G75 arrives with the Snapdragon 6 Gen 3 and promise of five OS upgrades

The Motorola Moto G75 that leaked last month is now official. It is powered by the Snapdragon 6 Gen 3 SoC and has 8GB of LPDDR4X RAM and 256GB of UFS 2.2 storage onboard. The Motorola Moto G75 runs Android 14-based MyUX out of the box and comes with the promise of five Android OS upgrades and six years of security updates.

A tip we received claimed Motorola UK's mailing list advertised the G75 with "software upgrades till 2030" and "three years of warranty," but Motorola's official websites for multiple countries - including the UK - have no mention of software upgrades till 2030. Perhaps they are referring to the security updates. It's still impressive, though. Here's hoping Motorola will deliver on its promise.

Moving on, the Motorola Moto G75 features a 6.78" FullHD+ LCD with a 120Hz refresh rate, up to 1,000 nits brightness, and Gorilla Glass 5 protection. The display also has a centered punch-hole for the 16MP selfie camera, but since it's an LCD, the fingerprint scanner is embedded in the power button.

Around the back, you get a 50MP primary camera using the Sony-LYTIA 600 sensor. It's joined by an 8MP ultrawide camera and a flicker sensor. The Moto G75 also comes with AI-powered features, including Magic Editor, Magic Eraser, and Photo Unblur. And keeping it fueled is a 5,000 mAh battery with 30W wired and 15W wireless charging.

The rest of the Motorola Moto G75's highlights include an IP68 rating, MIL-STD-810H certification, NFC, stereo speakers, Dolby Atmos, and Hi-Res Audio. Additionally, it features a USB-C port and a microSD card slot for storage expansion up to 1TB.

Motorola Moto G75's color options

The Motorola Moto G75 comes in Charcoal Grey, Aqua Blue, and Succulent Green colors. The first one sports a back cover with a matte finish, while the other two have vegan leather rear panels.

Motorola is yet to announce the Moto G75's pricing and availability details.

Reader comments

  • Anonymous

LCD is an ideal choice. Phones with CRAPOLED screens cause headaches and eye strain. And not small number of people are affected. Still find it puzzling that such a faulty screen technology was pushed on to the market without thorough testing.

  • Reply
  • 38 minutes ago
  • KhG

Finally a phone that has everything I need I currently have a Nokia xr21 and need to upgrade due to sluggish performance. I want ip68 and an LCD display because it's kinder for my eyes than OLED that uses PWM, I also want WiFi 6, 5g and a d...

  • Reply
  • 43 minutes ago
  • T7T
  • Anonymous

Good software support from Lenovo, never thought I‘d see that. We live in strange times where some budget to mid range phones have better support than high end from other brands (e.g. Sony)

  • Reply
  • 46 minutes ago
  • 3SI