Moto G Stylus 5G Review: Come for the Stylus, Stay for the Value
The Moto G Stylus 5G is Motorola's best pick for an affordable phone, but it's got stiff competition from Google and Samsung.
Motorola's new version of its Moto G Stylus 5G has one intriguing advantage over other phones: It's the most affordable stylus-packing handset that can connect to 5G. This year's Moto G Stylus 5G retails for $400 (down from last year's $500), which could make it more appealing to anyone who wants an affordable phone with added functionality. Having a gimmick has become increasingly important, both for Motorola's own lineup and for how the Stylus 5G stacks up to the likes of rivals from Google and Samsung.
International pricing wasn't immediately available, but $400 converts to roughly £320 or AU$590.
On the Motorola side of things, the 4G-only Moto G Stylus comes in at $200. After around a week of testing, I've found it to be a great value, but there are some reasons you'd want to pay double the price for a 5G version of the phone. The Stylus 5G gets potentially faster download speeds with 5G connectivity (though it only supports sub-6 5G) and it has better specs and a nicer display.
This is the best of Motorola's cheap phones coming out in 2023, but it's tough to recommend over the $500 just-launched Google Pixel 7A, or the newly discounted $350 Pixel 6A from last year (which can get even cheaper when price drops down to $300). The $450 Samsung Galaxy A54 5G makes the field even more crowded.
What the Stylus 5G offers over its competitors is, yes, the stylus -- which I found novel but not essential -- and a decent 1,080p display alongside good battery life. Its stereo speakers and 3.5mm headphone jack make it great for watching videos or listening to music.
The Stylus 5G should be prized for its value, in fact, rather than for offering an accessory that feels like a novelty without many uses.
Like the stylus, love the media experience
The Moto G Stylus 5G is among the rare few phones that still have a stylus, and is the best option for folks who don't want to pay $1,200 for a Samsung Galaxy S23 Ultra.
While you won't get a button on the stylus or a robust suite of stylus-related features compared to Samsung's flagship, the Stylus 5G has a small array of apps designed to use its accessory. Pop out the stylus from its slot on the right side of the bottom edge, and the phone opens the Notes app (by default, though you can set any app to open) for you to start writing or drawing. There are a few other apps that are meant to use the stylus, like categorizing entries and sending live-written notes, as well as transcribing written words to text -- a very notes-heavy experience.
Having a stylus is a novelty and makes the Stylus 5G stand out among competitors, but a more subtle combination of factors distinguish it, too. The 6.6-inch Full HD (2,400x1,080-pixel) display is sharp and shows good detail for an IPS LCD. Though in side by side comparisons, premium phones with OLED displays had (unsurprisingly) more true-to-life color balance and slightly sharper detail. The Stylus 5G's screen tended toward brighter, overly vibrant levels of saturation.
But for a $400 phone, I found it's a good screen for watching media, especially with its 120Hz maximum refresh rate that makes swiping through apps or scrolling across the web a buttery-smooth experience. Add to that top-and-bottom stereo speakers that feel truly balanced and the Stylus 5G is great to use for watching shows or playing games.
The Stylus 5G is also a respectably sleek phone for $400. At a distance, its matte rear cover looks metallic instead of plastic, as does its polished-looking plastic frame. The glass-covered square camera block on the back looks refined, and the lock button is large enough to double as a fingerprint scanner without being obnoxiously big.
Like most phones with a stylus, when locked in the end of the stylus slightly protrudes so that you can push it in to extend the endcap enough to get a fingernail underneath to pry it out.
Strong battery life, weak charging speeds
This year's Stylus 5G has a 5,000-mAh battery which, in my testing, often lasted for a full day of use and even well into the second day. The phone can recharge at up to 20 watts, but you wouldn't know that if you just used the basic 10-watt charger that came with the phone. In my tests, 30 minutes with the 10-watt charger juiced the phone up a measly 23% (from 5% to 28%). When I hooked it up to a charger supporting the phone's 20-watt maximum and it recharged 38% (from 28% to 66%) in the same amount of time.
In my 45-minute usage test, the battery started at 96% and dropped to 93% after 10 minutes of gaming. It was at 91% after 10 minutes of watching video, 89% after 10 minutes of social media use, 87% after 10 minutes of video call and down to 86% after 5 minutes of varied use.
The Stylus 5G doesn't support wireless charging, though that's common among budget phones. The phone has a water-repellent design, according to Motorola, which is equivalent to IP52 resistance to light dust and sprayed water -- but the phone has no official IP rating. That means that unlike with premium phones, which have IP68 ratings that allow them to survive prolonged drops in the pool and tumbles in beach sand, you should be careful with the Stylus 5G around liquids and dirt.
Good performance for a midrange phone
The Stylus 5G has respectable specs for its $400 price. The Snapdragon 6 Gen 1 chipset puts the handset's performance above its peers. Motorola did make some compromises in the specs compared to last year's model to get to a cheaper price. It offers only 4 or 6 GB of RAM rather than up to 8GB.
I didn't notice any slowdown when doing daily tasks like switching in and out of apps, watching media or playing games. There's a momentary pause when opening the camera app, but nothing egregious. Even with the display set to a buttery-smooth 120Hz, I didn't notice any hitching or lag while when I used the phone for basic tasks.
The phone handled gameplay without issue, running through PUBG matches and getting into shootouts with ease, whether I was playing at default settings or the graphics were bumped up (though the phone did feel warm with the latter).
This was impressive given the phone's middling benchmarks, including a Geekbench 6 single-core score of 945 and multicore score of 2,753, which are just below the Samsung Galaxy A54's scores but far below the Google Pixel 7A's single-core score of 1,439 and multicore score of 3,560). But the phone does perform better than its cheaper Motorola siblings -- a 3DMark Wild Life Extreme test resulted in a ho-hum score of 609 (3.7 fps), though that outperformed the 4G-only Moto G Stylus, which scored 191 (1.2 fps).
2023-06-16 00:28:41