An awesome midrange Android phone
The Good The Moto X4 is water-resistant, has NFC, expandable memory and dual rear cameras. Motorola's variant comes with tons of useful software tricks.
The Bad The phone's camera is slow to launch and snap photos. Its wide-angle camera warps straight lines too severely.
The Bottom Line Though it can be slow at times, the Motorola Moto X4 hits all the notes for the right price, making it a worthy midrange contender.
Visit manufacturer site for details.
otorola's high-end phones pack punch, but entry-level and midprice Android devices are where this phonemaker really shines. With the Moto X4, the company has another midrange winner that gives you some pretty great hardware and software tricks for a reasonable price (see below, it gets a bit complicated).
Motorola Moto X4 pricing
Motorola | Amazon | ||
---|---|---|---|
US | $399 (now $349) | $399 (now $324) | $330 (now $279) |
UK | £349 | N/A | N/A |
AU | AU$699 | N/A | N/A |
The Moto X4 sits a tier above the Moto G5 Plus ($199.99 at Amazon Marketplace), our favorite budget phone, and below the Moto Z2, which has magnetic attachments for accessories like an extended battery pack. (It costs about the same as the Z2 Play, which also works with the same add-ons.) What I like about the Moto X4 is its water-resistant design, dual rear cameras, expandable memory and boatload of software features at an inexpensive price. It lacks a super-fast processor and the ability to customize the phone's colors, which was one of my favorite things about Moto X phones from 2014.
You can buy the Moto X4 unlocked from Motorola.com, Google (with Project Fi service), or unlocked from Amazon with Prime ads. In the US, prices vary from $300 to $400 unlocked, but you should also keep an eye out for deals and price cuts in your area. In the UK, the Moto X4 starts at £349, and it costs AU$699 in Australia.
While it's not as fast as a Moto Z2 phone or the OnePlus 5T (another Android favorite that's a great top-tier value), it beats out other handsets in the price range. The Alcatel Idol 5S($279.99 at Amazon.com), for example, has a notably shorter battery life, and the HTC U11 Life, although strikingly beautiful and also water resistant, doesn't have a headphone jack. Fitting right between entry-level and top-tier, the Moto X4 settles into its newfound midrange home quite comfortably, and has the right specs and the right performance, for the right price.
Sleek design and water-resistant, too
Though sadly it's no longer customizable like Moto Xs of year's past, the Moto X4 is an attractive, sleek-looking phone. It comes in black and silver and it looks so glossy that it reminds me of the liquid-metal version of T-1000 in "Terminator." Speaking of liquid, the phone's rated IP68 for water-resistance, meaning it can survive in about 3 feet of water (one meter) for up to 30 minutes. I dunked it in a five-gallon bucket for 28 minutes -- three times -- and it kept working just fine.
Back to the phone's looks, that glossiness does result in a lot of fingerprint and smudges. And compared to other premium phones, the Moto X4 is on the thicker side and feels extra chunky. The bulging, watch-dial-like design around the camera lenses also adds more thickness to the back. Another gripe I have is the fingerprint reader. Though it's useful for unlocking the phone and authorizing payments with NFC and Android Pay, maddeningly, it sits below the bezel. And while others may not have as hard of a time adjusting, it made me reflexively and repeatedly tap the sensor thinking it was the home button. It was a habit I had to unlearn.
In addition, one of our Moto X4s managed to get two long scratches on the front-top bezel, which was a real bummer. I didn't drop the phone, but it likely got scratched in my bag. This is nothing a screen cover can't handle, but if you like to go au natural, be warned that I've tossed many phones into my bag without any issue, yet the Moto X4 ended up getting nicked.
Lots of software goodies, lots of assistants
If you buy the Moto X4 from Motorola and Amazon, you'll get a cool new feature called Moto Key (unfortunately, this doesn't come in the Google Fi version). This lets you use your fingerprint to unlock third-party apps and devices like Twitter, Facebook and your PC laptop. If you sign out of your accounts all the time, you'll definitely this useful. It does take a beat to unlock, but it's more convenient than typing out your username and password each time. You can also connect up to four Bluetooth devices at once, so you can hook up a stereo setup or listen to music on wireless headphones with another friend.
An onboard Alexa app (also missing from the Google Fi version) will launch Amazon's digital assistant. To ask about the latest news, sports score or weather, you can launch Alexa from the lockscreen by saying the "Alexa" wake word. If you have an Alexa smart home speaker, you can control it with the Moto X4 as well. If you don't like Alexa, you can use Moto's own voice-control feature (which can launch apps and open the weather or your calendar) or Google Assistant, which also comes on the phone. I suggest sticking to just one to give your head a break.
Although Google's Moto X4 doesn't have those two features, every Moto X4 includes gestures called Moto Actions, including flicking your wrist twice to launch the camera, and Moto Display, which lets you customize and set lockscreen notifications.
Google's Moto X4 brings you software updates like security patches, as they roll out from Google. Google Assistant is its only voice app, which I prefer anyway since it's so well integrated with the Google ecosystem.
Selfie camera flash and a side of AI
Like a lot of flagship phones these days, the Moto X4 flaunts two rear-cameras: a standard 12-megapixel camera and a wide-angle 8-megapixel camera. In general, pictures taken in environments with ample lighting, like outdoor on a sunny patio or inside a well-lit restaurant, looked evenly exposed, vibrant and sharp. The camera didn't fare as well with low light, however, and I saw a notable amount of grain, digital artifacts and motion blur with dimmer environments.
The front-facing camera has a 16-megapixel lens and its own flash, which is handy for brightening up selfies in low light. You can also take a "selfie panorama," which stitches together one additional image to the left and right of your face. This is useful for when you're taking a selfie with a big group or you want to capture more of the scene around you.
While I find the wide-angle camera useful whenever I want to fit more scenery within a single frame, the image distortion around the corners is too severe. The Moto X4 bends and warps straight lines so much that my photos look like a funhouse mirror at times. The LG V30($799.99 at Best Buy), in comparison, also has a second 120-degree wide-angle camera, and its lines do not bend as harshly.
Other camera features
So-so processing speeds and decent battery life
Equipped with a Snapdragon 630 processor, the Moto X4 isn't the fastest phone around. The Snapdragon 835 holds that title, though Qualcomm actually just announced its next-gen processor for 2018. On paper, the Moto X4 hits squarely with other midrange phones like the Moto G5 Plus or Alcatel Idol 5S, which sport the Snapdragon 635 and 625 processors, respectively. Go a bit more premium and you can get a much faster phone. The OnePlus 5T, for example, sports a Snapdragon 835 chipset and costs $100 more and it blazed right by the Moto X4 on 3DMark's Ice Storm Unlimited benchmark.
Anecdotally, the phone can be laggy at times. Though it's not slow enough to be extremely frustrating -- you can still browse the web, peck out emails, and download and launch apps with relative ease -- the camera can feel like a real drag. Not only does opening up the camera app take a tad too long, but firing the shutter takes a noticeable beat every time I tap to take a picture. When I leave my finger on the shutter to capture images continuously (known as "burst mode" shooting), the count is slow. In the five seconds it takes the Moto X4 to capture 10 pictures in burst mode, other phones will normally take 20 shots or more.
During CNET's battery test for continuous video playback on Airplane mode, the Moto X4 lasted an average of 12 hours and 33 minutes. That's a solid time for a phone of this caliber. The HTC U11 Life, for example, lasted the same time, while the Alcatel Idol 5S failed to impress us with 7 hours and 48 minutes.
The Moto X4 can definitely last through a workday without a charge. With medium to light usage, I was able to use the Moto X4 over the weekend without a charge. Like many Motorola phones, the Moto X4 has Turbo Charge technology for rapid top-ups.
Motorola Moto X4 spec comparison
Motorola Moto X4 | Motorola Moto G5 Plus | Alcatel Idol 5S | HTC U11 Life | |
---|---|---|---|---|
Display size, resolution | 5.2-inch; 1,920x1,080 pixels | 5.2-inch; 1,920x1,080 pixels | 5.2-inch; 1,920x1,080 pixels | 5.2-inch; 1,920x1,080 pixels |
Pixel density | 424ppi | 424ppi | 424ppi | 424ppi |
Dimensions (Inches) | 5.8x2.9x0.31 in. | 5.9x2.9x0.3 in. | 5.9x2.79x0.29 in. | 5.9x2.9x0.32 in. |
Dimensions (Millimeters) | 148.4x73.4x8mm | 150.2x74x7.7mm | 148.6x70.8x7.4mm | 149.1x72.9x8.1mm |
Weight (Ounces, Grams) | 5.7 oz; 163g | 5.5 oz; 155g | 5.25 oz; 149g | 5 oz; 142g |
Mobile software | Android 7.1.1 Nougat | Android 7.0 Nougat | Android 7.1 Nougat | Android 7.1 Nougat |
Camera | Dual 12-megapixel, 8-megapixel | 12-megapixel | 12-megapixel | 16-megapixel |
Front-facing camera | 16-megapixel | 5-megapixel | 8-megapixel | 16-megapixel |
Video capture | 4K | 4K | 1,080p | 4K |
Processor | 2.2GHz octa-core Qualcomm Snapdragon 630 | 2GHz octa-core Qualcomm Snapdragon 625 | 2GHz octa-core Qualcomm Snapdragon 625 | 2.2GHz octa-core Qualcomm Snapdragon 630 |
Storage | 32GB, 64GB | 32GB (UK & US), 64GB (US only) | 32GB | 32GB |
RAM | 3GB or 4GB | 2GB on 32 GB (US model), 3GB on 32GB (UK model) or 4GB on 64GB (US model) | 3GB | 3GB |
Expandable storage | Up to 2TB | Up to 128GB | Up to 512GB | Up to 2TB |
Battery | 3,000mAh | 3,000mAh | 2,620mAh | 2,600mAh |
Fingerprint sensor | Beneath screen | Beneath screen | Back cover | Beneath screen |
Connector | USB-C | Micro-USB | USB-C | USB-C |
Headphone jack | Yes | Yes | Yes | No |
Special features | Water-resistant (IP68), selfie-flash, dual rear cameras | Dual-SIM, splash-proof | Dual 3.6-watt speakers | Water-resistant (IP67) |
Price off-contract (USD) | $399 (Motorola and Google); $330 (Amazon with Prime ads) | $229 (32GB); $299 (64GB) | $280 | $349 (HTC) |
Price (GBP) | £349 | £249 (32GB) | Converts to £212 | Converts to £263 |
Price (AUD) | AU$699 | Converts to AU$300 (32GB) and AU$390 (64GB) | Converts to AU$350 | Converts to AU$456 |
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