The Moto G series is where Moto packs as much value as it can to produce a mass-market — the $150 to $499 range — phone. On the whole, the G5 and G5 Plus succeed.
The Moto G “heritage” is one of premium features without a premium price tag. The all-new Moto G5 and Moto G5 Plus remain true to this legacy, delivering what people want most without a premium price.
In the Android stakes, the LG Galaxy G5 is the only flagship class smartphone with a removable battery – and LG doesn't want you to forget that.
If comparisons with car engines are anything to go by — V4, V6, V8, V12 — then LG’s new V20 should be a screamer.
LG’s new G5 flagship takes its offerings to a new high – it is an amazing piece of kit that any high-end buyer should seriously consider.
In just over a week, LG’s anticipated new ‘modular’ Android smartphone, the G5, comes alive and arrives in Australia, with plenty of friends coming soon too.
LG’s new G5 may well be the most repairable, and one of the more desirable, Android smartphones in 2016.
LG's Mobile Chief in Australia, Gino Casha, let us take a sneak peek of the LG G5 before launch in April, and have a look at its world-first LG Stylus DAB+ radio phone coming later this year.
No Australian prices or availability yet, but LG’s secret is out: a ‘modular’ smartphone and companion ‘LG Friends’ designed to outclass Samsung, Apple and everyone else.