Quantity often seems to beat quality nowadays in Motorola’s incredibly expansive product portfolio, but at least stateside, this strategy of flooding the market with a heap of mainly middling handsets appears to be working like a charm, especially after LG’s retirement.
Clearly, we’re looking at an ultra-affordable phone here, and by those standards, the design is certainly not bad, with a centered hole punch, reasonably thin screen bezels, and a fairly large oblong-shaped rear camera system composed of a 50MP primary shooter, 8MP secondary sensor in charge of ultra-wide-angle photography, and 2MP tertiary lens taking care of depth duties.
Unfortunately, if history is any indication, the 4G LTE-only Moto G52 may never come to the US officially, and the same is likely to be true for a 5G-supporting variant if such a variant exists.