Showing: 1 ‐ 15 of 40 Phones
What's good
- MagSafe shows promise
- Beautiful screen
- 5G compatible
- Great design
What's bad
- 5G taxes battery life
- More expensive than the previous iPhone’s
Motorola Moto G Power (2021)
-
OS
- 6.6"Display size
- 48+ MP Camera
- 200 MHzProcessor
- 32/64 GBStorage
- Yes4G
What's good
- Massive battery life
- Affordable
- Good design
- Moto Gestures
What's bad
- Sluggish performance
- No NFC
- Disappointing display
- Inconsistent Camera
Verdict
The Moto G Power is all about battery life. If photography or screen quality isn't essential to you, this phone is hard to beat. However, if you want to play games, enjoy movies, or capture life’s little moments with the help of your phone, there’s a good chance the phone will fall short of your expectations.
What's good
- Affordable access to 5G
- Excellent battery life
- Bright display
What's bad
- Weak low-light camera performance
- Only one guaranteed software upgrade
- Bulky and heavy
Verdict
The Motorola One 5G Ace worked well and for a lesser price than other 5G capable phones on the market. In order to achieve such a fair price, sacrifices were made -- including camera quality and screen resolution. However, reviewers felt the One 5G Ace pulls its own weight while looking stylish.
What's good
- Extremely long battery life
- Beautiful display
- Good performance
What's bad
- Mediocre speakers
- Disappointing low-light photography
- Not a good choice for high-end gaming or 4K
Verdict
Unless 5G access is essential, the TCL 20S, with its crisp screen and the long battery life, might be just the budget-friendly phone you need.
Motorola Moto G Stylus 5G (2022)
-
OS
- 6.8"Display size
- 50+ MP Camera
- 2.2 GHzProcessor
- 128 GBStorage
- Yes4G
What's good
- Big, bright 120Hz screen
- Fast performance
- Good software support
What's bad
- No MicroSD slot
- No headphone jack
- Released at an awkward time
- Disappointing battery life
Verdict
The issue with the Samsung Galaxy S21 Fan Edition isn’t what it does or doesn’t do. It’s the wrong time to release a phone like this when the S22 already exists.
Apple iPhone 13 Pro Max
-
OS
- 6.7"Display size
- 12+ MP Camera
- 3.22 GHzProcessor
- 128/256/ 512/1000 GBStorage
- Yes4G
What's good
What's bad
Verdict
The decision between the iPhone 13 Pro and the iPhone 13 Pro Max essentially comes down to screen size and battery life. If you want the best of both -- and don't mind the price tag -- the Pro Max is the ultimate 2021 iPhone model.
See full review, specs & pricesWhat's good
- S-pen support
- Water-resistant
- Unsurpassed multi-tasking
What's bad
- Still expensive
- Bulky
- Lackluster camera
- S-pen not included
Verdict
If you don't mind the price, Samsung's Galaxy Z Fold 3 offers a taste of what could be the future of mobile technology. It's one of the first foldable phones reviewers seem to actually trust and the large display and S-Pen support give it huge potential for productivity and serious work.
See full review, specs & pricesApple iPhone 13 Pro
-
OS
- 6.1"Display size
- 12+ MP Camera
- 3.22 GHzProcessor
- 128/256/ 512/1000 GBStorage
- Yes4G
What's good
- Improved battery life
- Highest performance available
- Fast 120Hz refresh rate display
What's bad
- Minimal design changes
- 4K video restricted to 128GB
- Fast charging limited to 20W
Verdict
If you've bought an iPhone in the last couple years, the newest model is more of the same -- albeit it better. But for first-time iPhone buyers, creatives, those looking for the absolute best mobile experience available, or owners of much older iPhones, the iPhone 13 Pro is a powerful, premium phone. Be warned, however, it has a price tag to match.
See full review, specs & prices