Android Advisor

Moto G6 Play

£169 inc VAT from fave.co/2IbusST

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The Moto G6 Play is a sleek budget phone that costs just £169. It is an outstandin­g cheap phone in 2018 that in no way feels like one despite costing less than the Moto G6 and G6 Plus.

While those two handsets have better specificat­ions, the G6 Play has charmed us right out

the box. It is well designed, sleek yet sturdy and a decent performer considerin­g the low-end spec sheet.

Here’s our review explaining why the Moto G6 Play is such a good deal.

Design

While the G6 and G6 Plus look pretty much identical, the Moto G6 Play has a slightly different design. You can tell it’s part of the same range of phones, but the Play has a few quirks that make it stand out.

For starters, the fingerprin­t scanner is on the back and has the Motorola logo on it. You might prefer the placement compared to the frontmount­ed G6 and G6 Plus, but that’s entirely down to personal preference.

At first glance you’d think Motorola had removed its headphone jack, but actually it’s moved it from its position next to the USB port on the G6 and G6 Play to the top of the device. Another change here is that this port is Micro-USB rather than USB-C, which is a shame considerin­g its an older standard, but understand­able considerin­g the price.

While the more expensive G6 models have a sleek 3D glass rear cover, the G6 Play is plastic. It still looks and feels good though, and actually the plastic cover helps in terms of grip. The other thing missing here is a p2i water-repellent coating

(in the UK at least), so you’ll have to be a little more careful with it around water, but we used it in the rain and it came out unscathed.

The G6 Play is a bit chunkier than most phones at 9mm and weighs a reasonable 175g. These aren’t huge difference­s to the other G6 phones, though and the bulk and weight actually help to make it feel more premium – but if you want a slim, sleek phone this is not it. Our review unit is an attractive hue though somewhat a fingerprin­t magnet. But the way it reflects light is very cool for a budget phone and helps it to stand out, along with its circular camera module.

Display

The G6 Play’s screen is a 5.7in 18:9 LCD, but not a Full HD resolution at 1440x720p. We still really liked using the phone, and the lower resolution of the display in comparison to the G6 and G6 Plus isn’t an issue in our eyes. It can deal with colour reproducti­on well in standard mode, but has the option to change to vibrant to boost the saturation. The display is more than sufficient at this price, and this is one of the cheapest 18:9 phones we’ve seen, and Netflix on the bus was no trouble at all.

Processor, memory and storage

It’s impressive to see the G6 Play has 3GB of RAM and 32GB of storage, which matches the entry configurat­ion of the regular G6. However, the processor drops from a Qualcomm Snapdragon 450 to a 430. The lower-grade chip means performanc­e isn’t as good, and in a tangible way, though we found

the phone perfectly serviceabl­e as our main phone for several days. Multi-tasking is a tad slow at times and the camera app lags, but for calls, texts, social media, email and even Spotify to Bluetooth headphones, the G6 Play is surprising­ly excellent.

As our benchmarks shows, the G6 Play holds its own against phones of the same price and specs. It performs faster in frames per second tests than the G6 due to its lower resolution screen – but in fact, you won’t notice any difference in use between any of these four phones.

Connectivi­ty and audio

As is standard on lower-end phones, there is Bluetooth 4.2 for connecting to accessorie­s such as

speakers, but with the absence of the aptX standard, audio quality to wireless headphones is noticeably patchy. If you want to use the speaker, it’s a front port deal and gets quite loud, but is only suited to talk radio or podcast playback – and a quiet solo Netflix session at a push.

Cameras

Motorola has given the G6 Play a 13Mp camera, but there’s no secondary lens. There’s phase detection autofocus and an f/2.0 aperture, and the results are just about social media-acceptable, but it is obviously not a standout shooter.

Note how it can capture the sky well in some shots, but it becomes blown out in others. The level of detail captured for a budget phone is pretty decent, though.

Video is limited to 1080p at 30fps, though the phone can still record slow motion. The front camera is 8Mp like the other G6 models but, again, has fewer features here and is passable at best.

Battery life

Although most areas are downgrades, the Play offers a much higher-capacity battery than both the other G6 phones. It’s a whopping 4,000mAh, compared to the 3,000- and 3,200mAh G6 and G6 Plus.

Motorola says this means you can get 32 hours usage from the device, which sounds amazing – and more importantl­y we found to be true in real world use. The G6 Play lasted for over two days of use before hitting anywhere near 10 percent battery, which is impressive on a modern (if low-end) smartphone.

It also benefits from Turbo Charging: you can get six hours of life from a 15-minute charge and in our tests, it charged from 0- to 33 percent in half an hour.

Software

Overall, the experience on the G6 Play is solid thanks to Moti’s uncluttere­d Android skin that barely changes anything from stock. Notably, there are fewer camera features on the phone compared to the G6 and G6 Plus thanks to the lack of dual rear cameras.

You still get Android 8.0 Oreo with a stock interface – it’s very much the experience you get on Google’s own Pixel devices bar a few aesthetic changes. That means Android as it’s intended, with no bloatware to take up valuable storage, important when you only have 32GB (although it is expandable).

Motorola does add its own Moto app, which contains helpful things such as actions and things you can do with the display. The G6 Play doesn’t have Moto Voice, though.

Verdict

The Moto G6 Play is a great little surprise of a phone. It holds its own next to the other two G6 phones and has better battery life (and a cooler fingerprin­t sensor). The 18:9 display and premium (but plastic)

design means it feels just as well-made as phones double the price but doesn’t compromise on performanc­e to do so. With a headphone jack as a plus, a minus is Micro-USB but we’ll forgive that on its strengths and can recommend the G6 Play as one of the best budget phones of 2018. Chris Martin and Henry Burrell

Specificat­ions

• 5.7in (1440x720, 282ppi) IPS LCD capacitive display

• Android 8.0 Oreo

• Qualcomm MSM8937 Snapdragon 430 processor

• Octa-core 1.4GHz Cortex-A53 CPU

• Adreno 505 GPU

• 2/3GB RAM

• 16/32B storage, microSD up to 256GB

• Iris/fingerprin­t scanner

• 13Mp rear-facing camera: f/2.0, 1.12μm, phase detection autofocus, LED flash

• 8Mp front-facing camera: LED flash, 1080p

• 802.11b/g/n Wi-Fi

• Bluetooth 54.2

• A-GPS, GLONASS, BDS

• Micro-USB 2.0

• Non-removable lithium-ion 4,000mAh battery

• 154.4x72.2x9mm

• 175g

 ??  ?? The level of detail captured for a budget phone is pretty decent
The level of detail captured for a budget phone is pretty decent
 ??  ?? The G6 Play’s camera is decent for a budget camera
The G6 Play’s camera is decent for a budget camera
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GFXBench T-Rex
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