Motorola Moto G7 Power review
A 12MP camera with an f/2.0 lens
The Moto G7 Power has a 12 MP snapper behind an f/2.0 lens and its sensor has 1.25µm pixels. The camera has phase-detection autofocus and has a single-LED flash that should be more useful as a flashlight rather than low-light photos, but still, it's there.
Hardware-wise, we can't really say we're all that impressed. However, Motorola has made a habit out of trying its best to improve the overall camera experience, as best it can, sprinkling on extra features. Often times, rather surprising ones.
For instance, 4K video recording is rather surprising to see on a budget phone. Then there is EIS available for the 1080p clips. And the Portrait mode has made it to the G7 Power, too, even though there isn't a depth sensor.
The Manual mode is surprisingly full-featured and includes shutter speed and ISO controls, even manual focus.
Image quality
The camera supports Auto HDR and it comes with this enabled by default. When shooting in Auto HDR the phone will always stack multiple images for a clearer picture with boosted dynamic range.
The pictures we shot with the camera's default settings - meaning Auto HDR - turned out pretty great for the class. The 12MP shots have plenty of detail, low noise levels, nice sharpness, and lively and accurate colors. The dynamic range isn't spectacular, but it's quite decent.
Moto G7 Power Auto HDR 12MP samples
If you turn off the HDR, the camera shoots very good photos, too. The noise levels are higher, and the images are a bit softer, but that's to be expected. And the dynamic range is a bit lower, of course.
Snapping a photo with HDR takes about one second, while without HDR - it's around half a second. But we still recommend sticking to using Auto HDR - it really improves the photos.
HDR off • HDR on • HDR off • HDR on
Auto HDR doesn't bring any benefits in the low-light scenes, at least not on the Moto G7 Power. The images are noisy and lack detail, the exposures are somewhat too dark for our taste and that's with all the sources of light already clipped pretty high. Nighttime photography is not this phone's strongest suit.
Moto G7 Power 12MP low-light samples
Once you're done examining the real-life samples you can have a look at our Photo compare tool for some studio shots. We've pre-selected the Redmi Note 7 and the Moto G7 but you can pick any other set of phones to compare once you're there.
Moto G7 Power against the Redmi Note 7 and the Moto G7 in our Photo compare tool
Portraits
There is a dedicated portrait mode on the Moto G7 Power even though there is no depth camera on its back. The edge detection is alright when certain conditions are met, but nothing super accurate. All the shots we took look blurry and noisy. We can't see many people using this mode unless they have a portrait-friendly haircut and background.
Moto G7 Power 12MP portrait shots
Selfies
Just like the Moto G7 Play, the Motorola G7 Power relies on an 8MP f/2.2 camera, but there is no LED flash.
The 8MP photos we snapped with the front snapper turned out pretty good with lots of resolved detail, good sharpness, high contrast, and true to life colors.
Moto G7 Power 8MP selfie samples
You can snap portrait shots with the selfie camera, too, and surprisingly those came out better than the ones we took with the main snapper. The edge detection is mostly fine, the blurred background looks nice and the transition between the subject and the blur isn't abrupt.
Moto G7 Power 8MP portrait selfie samples
4K video recording
The Motorola Moto G7 Power can record videos at up to 4K@30 fps. It also has a surprisingly good EIS algorithm working in the background for the 1080p@30fps clips. You can toggle that stabilization off, in case you really need to use the entire frame, without any crop or have a tripod handy.
Videos shot on the Motorola G7 Power in 4K and 1080p resolution at 30 fps get saved in a rather standard configuration of a 17-ish Mbps AVC video feed and a 48kHz stereo AAC audio track, inside an MP4 container. The frame rate remains pretty steady at 30 fps.
Quality is actually quite good with plenty of detail for the class, high contrast, and lively colors. The dynamic range is about average.
The 1080p at 60fps videos have the same bitrate as the 30fps ones and thus they lack in detail but match everything else - contrast, colors, dynamic range.
As usual, we're providing you with unedited short samples to download and examine - 2160p@30fps (12s, 26MB), 1080p@30fps (11s, 23MB), and 1080p@60fps (11s, 24MB).
The last stop is, of course, our Video compare tool where you can compare the Moto G7 Power's output against other phones we've tested. We've pre-selected the Realme 2 Pro and the Moto G7, but a different set of devices is only a few clicks away.
Moto G7 Power against the Realme 2 Pro and the Moto G7 in our Video compare tool
Reader comments
- Jwest
- 13 Oct 2023
- nEm
Phone battery is replacable but I think you will need to take it to a phone shop. Expect to pay about £50.
- Massa alex
- 16 Sep 2023
- XBp
My Motorola moto G7 the battery is dead can I get a new one
- Red
- 04 Apr 2023
- kQc
Review should distinguish between memory and storage, but otherwise helpful. Thanks.