Showing: 1 ‐ 15 of 296 Phones
Samsung Galaxy S20 FE
-
OS
- 6.5"Display size
- 12+ MP Camera
- 2.84 GHzProcessor
- 128/256/ 512 GBStorage
- Yes4G
What's good
- 120Hz screen
- Fast performance
- Affordable
- Available in 6 different colors
What's bad
- Camera is so-so
- Faulty/slow fingerprint scanner
- Fast charge costs extra
Samsung Galaxy S21 Ultra
-
OS
- 6.8"Display size
- 108+ MP Camera
- 2.84 GHzProcessor
- 128/256/ 512 GBStorage
- Yes4G
What's good
- Lovely AMOLED screen
- Best battery life for its tier
- S-pen support
- Fast refresh rate
What's bad
- Very expensive
- No MicroSD expansion
- Ads in Samsung software
Verdict
Having to pay extra for more storage up front is a new change for Samsung. In terms of everything else, there’s not a lot to say about the phone in terms of failings. At the end of the day, the simple question is, can you afford it and do you need a phone this powerful?
What's good
- Big beautiful screen
- Excellent battery life
- Headphone jack
- Fast fingerprint scanner
What's bad
- No waterproof or dust rating
- Stale design choice
- No wireless charging
What's good
- 90Hz display
- Headphone jack
- Affordable 5G access
- Good performance
What's bad
- Unimpressive cameras
- Dim display
Samsung Galaxy Note20 Ultra
-
OS
- 6.9"Display size
- 108+ MP Camera
- 3 GHzProcessor
- 128/512 GBStorage
- Yes4G
What's good
- 120Hz refresh screen
- Camera with 5x optical zoom and up to 50x digital zoom
- All-day battery life
- S Pen stylus support
- Outstanding performance
What's bad
- Very expensive
- Heavy and awkward to hold
- Protruding camera hub
What's good
- Fast 120hz display refresh rate
- Better hinge
- Useful cover display
What's bad
- Very expensive
- Lacking camera quality
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
- Solid Design
- Thin for a dual-display phone
- Strong hinge
- Supports Microsoft Pen
What's bad
- Buggy software
- Expensive
- Poor camera
What's good
- Amazing battery life
- Affordable
- Nice build design
- The plastic back-plate won't shatter
What's bad
- Mediocre performance
- Lackluster camera
- Limited software support
Verdict
Don’t expect to play the latest games, wow friends and family with your photography skills, or multitask all day. While the phone might work for light use or younger users, reviewers question the value compared to other phones in the 2021 Moto G line-up.