![]() Which puts the typically budget Moto G into lesser known waters. But the Plus is a minimum of £60 more, starting at £229. All notable points compared to the standard Moto G4. In summary: the Plus has a better camera, adds a fingerprint scanner, has 32GB minimum on-board storage, can be RAM-upgraded at point of purchase (£38 additional), and includes a TurboPower charger in the box for fast-charging. We still very much like the G4 Plus, but if you're after a truly budget purchase then, as it turns out, the standard Moto G4 does the majority of what you'll need just fine. In this new inflated 5.5-inch form and with a bunch of features squeezed into the body, it no longer serves its ultra budget role. ![]() But it's also changed what Moto G is about. Motorola, now under Lenovo's command, has smoothed out design issues with earlier G-series models. Even some of the Plus's features don't quite make sense: the lack of NFC means no Android Pay is possible from the included fingerprint scanner.īut we can't bad-mouth it as a phone in general. It finds itself floating between two market positions: it's not the budget purchase that the G-series has always been known for, while knocking on the door of superior middle-range models. Problem is the OnePlus 3 has just launched, and if you want the 4GB RAM and 64GB on-board storage version of the G4 then the potential £264 price point means Motorola doesn't quite cut the mustard. ![]() Which would have been fine, say, a year ago. In a sense the G4 Plus feels like a OnePlus 2. ![]()
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