The Pixel 4a was great while it lasted, and it offered a whole lot for its $350 price tag. It featured Qualcomm’s Snapdragon 730 chipset, 6GB of RAM, and 128GB of storage, which was double of what the Pixel 3a offered—for a price that was $50 cheaper. Its camera was nothing to scoff at, either, with very impressive image quality for the price, and a 4k camera capable of shooting at 30 FPS.
In the end, though, it’s still a case of “in with the new, out with the old.” And we’re currently awaiting the imminent release of the Google Pixel 6a, which promises to be everything the Google Pixel 4a and 5a were, as well as everything they weren’t.
The Pixel 6a is expected to be released in May this year—much sooner than we thought—and we hope its price tag won’t be too far above the $450 that the Pixel 5a launched for.