Motorola's new Moto G67 and Moto G77 mid-rangers are official and up for grabs at killer prices

Too bad US availability is almost definitely out of the question.

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Official Motorola Moto G77 promotional image
The always-popular Moto G family of budget-friendly Android handsets with respectable specifications has officially welcomed two new members across the old continent, and although their designs are pretty uninspired and repetitive, the Moto G77 and Moto G67 promise to deliver phenomenal bang for your buck Euro.

This is what the Moto G67 and Moto G77 have in common


  • 6.78-inch Extreme AMOLED screen with 2772 x 1272 pixel resolution, 120Hz refresh rate technology, and 5000 nits peak brightness;
  • Android 16;
  • Up to 512GB internal storage space;
  • 5,200mAh battery;
  • 30W charging support;
  • 8MP secondary rear-facing camera with f/2.2 aperture;
  • Moto AI-powered Ultra-Res, Night Vision, Portrait, Panorama, Pro Mode, Scan, and Auto Smile Capture tools;
  • 32MP front-facing camera;
  • IP64 water and dust resistance;
  • MIL-STD 810H durability certification;
  • Corning Gorilla Glass 7i screen protection;
  • Stereo speakers with Dolby Atmos;
  • 164.18 x 77.37 x 7.3 mm dimensions;
  • 182 grams weight;
  • USB Type-C port;
  • microSD card slot for up to 2TB storage expansion;
  • Bluetooth 5.4;
  • NFC.

We've all seen Motorola (and other smartphone manufacturers) unveil similar devices before, but rarely have two different products (with two different names) shared so many specs and features.


These phones might as well be called Moto G67 and Moto G67 Plus, looking not just similar but virtually identical in terms of everything from screen bezels (pretty thin!) to rear-facing camera modules (a little large and clunky), backplate finishes (pretty eye-catching but maybe not as sleek as vegan leather), and yes, overall dimensions and weight.

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All that being said, the above specs are by no means bad (for the two's price points), including gorgeous displays with remarkably high brightness numbers, military-grade robustness, digital hoarder-friendly storage counts (in the most advanced configurations), hefty batteries squeezed into fairly thin bodies, and a better-sounding selfie camera than your average budget 5G phone available in Europe today.

This is what separates the Moto G77 from the Moto G67


  • 8GB RAM vs. 4GB;
  • MediaTek Dimensity 6400 processor vs. Dimensity 6300;
  • 108MP primary rear-facing camera with f/1.7 aperture and 3x lossless zoom vs. 50MP Sony Lytia 600 sensor with Quad Pixel technology;
  • Pantone Shaded Spruce and Pantone Black Olive vs. Pantone Nile and Pantone Arctic Seal color options;
  • 4+ years of guaranteed security updates vs. 4 years of security updates.

That's really not a very lengthy list, but (almost) all of those distinctions could make a world of difference in real-life use. We're talking twice as much memory for the Moto G67 Plus G77 compared to the G67, a newer and faster chipset, and perhaps most importantly (at least for shutterbugs on a tight budget), a "class-leading" camera system compared to a... not-bad-but-also-not-great 50MP main snapper on the back of the humbler (and cheaper) handset.


The differences in color are more a matter of personal taste than an objective and uncontested advantage for the Moto G77, while Motorola's "4+ years" software support promise (for security patches and not actual OS promotions) may or may not prove superior to the flat "4 years" guarantee of the G67.

Should you buy the Moto G67 or G77?


Well, in order to ask that question to begin with, you have to actually live in a region where these phones are up for grabs. That includes countries like France and the UK, for instance, where the Moto G67 starts at €259 and £199.99 with 256 and 128GB storage respectively and the Moto G77 costs €299 and £250 in 512 and 128GB variants respectively.

Do you have any interest in these new Motorola mid-rangers?

Unfortunately, there's no point in converting those tags into US dollars, both because that's not how regional pricing works and because the two new Android mid-rangers are unlikely to ever be released stateside.

If you can live with those generic and decidedly unremarkable designs, I highly recommend you at least consider a purchase on the old continent, as the value for money is almost impossible to beat. And yes, that goes for both the Moto G67 and Moto G77.

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