The Moto G56 is the latest addition to Motorola’s budget phones, With the G-series, Motorola is committed to releasing affordable and functional phones that provide good battery life and a clean user experience and the Moto G56 is no exception. But how good is its camera set-up?
Motorola Moto G56 Descriptions.
- Main camera 50MP Sony LYTIA600 sensor, f/1.8, PDAF, 1x with 2x crop available
- Ultra wide angle camera: 8MP f/2.2 aperture
- Selfie camera: 32MP
- 6.7inch LCD, 120Hz refresh rate, Corning Gorilla Glass 7i
- 5200mAh battery 30W charging
- Ram/Storage: 12GB RAM +256GB storage extendable to 2TB
- OS system: Android 15
- IP68 & IP69
- Size: 165.8 x 76.3 x 8.4mm
The Moto G56 features a new 50 MP Sony LYTIA600 sensor with bright f/1.8 aperture, PDAF and 0.8 μm pixel size, an incremental update over the G55. The main camera uses Quad Pixel Technology, which aids low-light performance and helps control noise, but seems to have lost OIS in the meantime. The second camera is a more moderate 8MP ultra-wide-angle one with an f/2.2 aperture. For selfies, it is equipped with a 32MP f/2.2 HDR camera, which has a 0.7μm pixel size.
The Moto G56 records FullHD 60p video using the main camera; there’s no 4K recording available. When using the ultra-wide camera, you are further limited to only 30p. It is one of the first devices that received the brand new MediaTek Dimensity 7060 processor and features a 5200 mAh battery, unusually big for this price and could see you through a whole day with constant use, but it supports slow, 30W wired charging only.The Moto G56 comes with Android 15, with two further OS updates promised.