Motorola’s $280 Pantone-Colored Smartphone Looks Good for a Budget Device
Babe wake up, Motorola and Pantone dropped a smartphone collab. It isn’t what you expect, but for €250, one learns to not expect much. The Moto G56, the company’s latest budget device, comes in 3 gorgeous finishes – Dazzling Blue, Dill, and Black Oyster – all solid, deeply saturated hues with no cheap gradients or gaudy faux-metallic tricks.
This might be one of the few budget phones where the design doesn’t scream compromise. The colorwork is what grabs you first, sure, but there’s more happening under that Pantone-grade shell. For €250, the Moto G56 delivers a 6.72-inch FHD+ display with 120Hz refresh and 1000 nits of brightness. It’s LCD, not OLED, but at this price, that spec sheet is doing laps around expectations. Gorilla Glass 7i up front and IP68/IP69 durability round it out. Yes, it’ll survive splashes, sand, and probably a kitchen countertop drop or three.
Designer: Motorola
Motorola kept the headphone jack too, because someone had to. While everyone else chases “courage,” the G56 doubles down on practical features. The stereo speakers are paired with Dolby Atmos, the fingerprint reader sits right where your thumb expects it, and that 5200mAh battery means you’re not hugging a wall outlet by dinner. Charging caps at 33W, which isn’t mind-blowing, but fast enough to not be a bottleneck.
Inside, it runs the MediaTek Dimensity 7060 – a bump from the 7025 in the G55—paired with 4GB or 8GB of RAM and 128GB or 256GB of storage. You also get microSD expansion, because why kill off useful things? On the camera front, there’s a 50MP Sony LYT-600 main sensor, backed by an 8MP ultrawide and a 32MP selfie camera that’s probably overkill for what TikTok really needs. And yes, it still rocks a visible chin on the bottom bezel, because this isn’t a Pixel 8a and it doesn’t pretend to be.
It ships with Android 15, and Motorola’s update policy is… acceptable. One OS upgrade and three years of security patches for the 4GB variant, two OS upgrades and four years for the 8GB model. Not class-leading, but not insultingly bad either.
The G56 isn’t blowing past premium phones in benchmarks. But it’s not trying to. It’s redefining what a budget phone should feel like – something considered, something styled, something that actually looks like it belongs in 2025. Motorola isn’t just throwing Pantone at a plastic shell for marketing points. It’s committing to a classy look and feel that most budget phones rarely bother to chase.
For the G56 isn’t punching up. It’s building a new lane entirely – one where design and color matter, specs make sense, and you’re not forced to pretend your mid-range phone wants to be anything else.The post Motorola’s Pantone-Colored Smartphone Looks Good for a Budget Device first appeared on Yanko Design.
#motorolas #pantonecolored #smartphone #looks #good
Motorola’s $280 Pantone-Colored Smartphone Looks Good for a Budget Device
Babe wake up, Motorola and Pantone dropped a smartphone collab. It isn’t what you expect, but for €250, one learns to not expect much. The Moto G56, the company’s latest budget device, comes in 3 gorgeous finishes – Dazzling Blue, Dill, and Black Oyster – all solid, deeply saturated hues with no cheap gradients or gaudy faux-metallic tricks.
This might be one of the few budget phones where the design doesn’t scream compromise. The colorwork is what grabs you first, sure, but there’s more happening under that Pantone-grade shell. For €250, the Moto G56 delivers a 6.72-inch FHD+ display with 120Hz refresh and 1000 nits of brightness. It’s LCD, not OLED, but at this price, that spec sheet is doing laps around expectations. Gorilla Glass 7i up front and IP68/IP69 durability round it out. Yes, it’ll survive splashes, sand, and probably a kitchen countertop drop or three.
Designer: Motorola
Motorola kept the headphone jack too, because someone had to. While everyone else chases “courage,” the G56 doubles down on practical features. The stereo speakers are paired with Dolby Atmos, the fingerprint reader sits right where your thumb expects it, and that 5200mAh battery means you’re not hugging a wall outlet by dinner. Charging caps at 33W, which isn’t mind-blowing, but fast enough to not be a bottleneck.
Inside, it runs the MediaTek Dimensity 7060 – a bump from the 7025 in the G55—paired with 4GB or 8GB of RAM and 128GB or 256GB of storage. You also get microSD expansion, because why kill off useful things? On the camera front, there’s a 50MP Sony LYT-600 main sensor, backed by an 8MP ultrawide and a 32MP selfie camera that’s probably overkill for what TikTok really needs. And yes, it still rocks a visible chin on the bottom bezel, because this isn’t a Pixel 8a and it doesn’t pretend to be.
It ships with Android 15, and Motorola’s update policy is… acceptable. One OS upgrade and three years of security patches for the 4GB variant, two OS upgrades and four years for the 8GB model. Not class-leading, but not insultingly bad either.
The G56 isn’t blowing past premium phones in benchmarks. But it’s not trying to. It’s redefining what a budget phone should feel like – something considered, something styled, something that actually looks like it belongs in 2025. Motorola isn’t just throwing Pantone at a plastic shell for marketing points. It’s committing to a classy look and feel that most budget phones rarely bother to chase.
For the G56 isn’t punching up. It’s building a new lane entirely – one where design and color matter, specs make sense, and you’re not forced to pretend your mid-range phone wants to be anything else.The post Motorola’s Pantone-Colored Smartphone Looks Good for a Budget Device first appeared on Yanko Design.
#motorolas #pantonecolored #smartphone #looks #good
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