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Powering the entire shebang is a 5,000 mAh battery, which we expect to see use for several days, as it is paired with a chipset that absorbs energy rather than swallows it. Meanwhile, behind it is a quartet of cameras: you will spend most of your time shooting with the 48 megapixel wide main sensor, but it is flanked by a 2 megapixel depth sensor, an 8 megapixel ultra-wide camera with a Field of 118 degree vision and a curious 5 megapixel macro camera for extreme close-ups. Now the jury is still out on whether people are really clamoring for this type of highly specialized sensor, but Motorola takes credit for improving the deal in an unusual way: It gave that macro camera a proper tiny ring of light. . (And in case you’re wondering, no, you can’t use it as a more attractive type of flash for the other cameras.)
The front camera situation is equally surprising, as Motorola saw fit to add two of them here. The first is a relatively straightforward 16-megapixel camera with an f / 2.0 aperture, and you can count on this for stronger selfies. The other camera, meanwhile, is an 8-megapixel ultrawide that Motorola says can fit three or four more people in the frame at once. Throw in a side-mount fingerprint reader, a headphone jack, and NFC for all those COVID-era contactless payments, and it looks like you’re looking at a phone that could give Google’s cheap new Pixels a real fight in the world. imminent 5G mid-range smartphone war.
Of course, all too often there is a gap between the potential of a paper phone and its performance in the real world. Motorola is considering an imminent launch, so stay tuned to see how its unusually attractive new phone stacks up against the competition.