![]() Edge detection wasn’t perfect when shooting portraits, either, getting caught out by stray hairs as soon as you dial up the digital blur. Given that 2x shots are often cropped from the main sensor when there’s enough light, that can lead to a little guesswork as to how your snaps will turn out.Ģx zoom images were overly sharpened in places, and the digital zoom needed for anything beyond that sees a big drop off in clarity – Motorola remains a step behind Google, Samsung and others here. ![]() But at 12MP it’s still in third place to the other cams, which have 50MP sensors.Īll three are capable of capturing a fair amount of detail in good light, although exposure and colour treatments simply aren’t consistent on a particularly overcast day, grass looked more saturated on a zoomed-in shot compared to one taken at 1x. The Edge 40 Pro gets a far more useful portrait telephoto camera to go with its main and wide-angle shooters it’s good for 2x optical zoom, and promises bokeh-filled portraits courtesy of an f/1.6 aperture. Cameras: far more flexibleĪn uninspiring depth lens meant last year’s Edge 30 Pro was one snapper short of success, so Motorola made sure the same didn’t happen with its replacement. It’s Bluetooth all the way for personal listening, with no 3.5mm headphone port on the phone and no dongle in the box. Dial it back a few notches and you’ll be perfectly happy, though. They’re tuned to deliver clear vocals, making them ideal for podcasts and YouTube videos, but certain music genres come across as overly sharp when you really crank the volume. We had no complaints when it came to screen clarity, the 2400×1080 resolution looking perfectly crisp even at very close distance.Ī set of Dolby Atmos-approved stereo speakers are a great match to the screen, with a decently wide soundstage for a phone. We’d say things are a little too intense out of the box, but while Motorola doesn’t offer much in the way of display tweakage (just two colour presets and a simple temperature slider), the Natural option does dials things back to a more true-to-life palette. Naturally with an OLED you’re getting seriously vibrant colours and outstanding contrast, plus excellent viewing angles.
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