![]() ![]() You can also see the well-known focus issues of the Moto X: the figure in the foreground is not in good focus, despite pointing the auto focus straight at the figure. / © ANDROIDPIT In these 100% crops you can see the difference between 13 and 8 megapixels: the Moto X (above) picks up more detail than the Moto G / © ANDROIDPITīut megapixels and sharpness of detail is not everything: in this low light shot you can see that the Moto X (above) produced significantly more noise than the Moto G (below). There's a particularly marked difference between the two devices on the front camera too: The Moto G (right) captures skin tones and the green of the background realistically, while the Moto X (left) is much less convincing. This shot under a cloudy sky shows hardly any differences at first glance, but on closer inspection you can see that the Moto X (top) is colder and has a slight blue tint. / © ANDROIDPIT The bottom picture looks almost faded, but the reality is actually more appropriate than the over-saturated shot on top. / © ANDROIDPIT Here it becomes clear how far apart the Moto X (top) and Moto G (below) are in terms of contrast and color saturation. The mixture of artificial and natural light that illuminates our snack box could be the cause of this, but the Moto G handles it decently enough. Take a look at our Moto G (2014) vs Moto G comparison video.īright colors in the snack box: the Moto X produces a sharper picture with higher contrast, but there is also a bluish tint in the image.Here are the cropped but otherwise unedited comparison photos - the Moto X is always on the top and the Moto G is always on the bottom. The resolution was, of course, different for both cameras at the maximum value (13 MP for the Moto X and 8 MP for the Moto G), but even more than the sharpness of detail, we were interested in factors such as realistic color reproduction (auto white balance), dynamic range and noise performance.īefore we give you our conclusions, take a look for yourself and see what you see. We took the same pictures with both devices in different situations and directly compared the results. ![]() Moto X (2014) vs Moto G (2014) camera comparison: the evidence The result? Erica Griffin is absolutely right. The surprising results of those photos raised the question: does the Moto G (2014) shoot better photos than the Moto X (2014)? We now have both devices and have tested their cameras side by side. What they came up with is sometimes amazing and sometimes terrifying.Īll this started because the well known tech blogger and hardcore tester Erica Griffin showed comparison photos of the new Motorola smartphones which she had just picked up at the launch event in Chicago, at the same time as we were testing them out at IFA 2014 in Berlin. But how does it work in practice? And are the larger resolution cameras better or are they just larger resolution? Our comparisons in the past have shown us repeatedly that megapixels are not everything, so we've taken the Moto X (2014) and Moto G (2014) on a camera tour. The new Moto X even has a funky looking dual-LED ring flash surrounding the camera lens. The Moto X (2014) and Moto G (2014): is the Moto G actually better than the Moto X? / © ANDROIDPITĢnd generation cameras: are they bigger and better? Or just bigger?īoth the Moto X (2014) and Moto G (2014) have been gifted with a new camera this time around, and both have larger sensors than in their predecessors. ![]()
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