Motorola Moto G10 Play renders and specs leak online
According to the latest renders, the Motorola Moto G10 Play will hit the market with a side-mounted fingerprint reader, an old-school 3.5 mm headphone jack located on the top, not to mention the 4,850 mAh battery capacity that was revealed by the TÜV Rheinland certification documents for the handset.
Motorola's Moto G9 Play successor is on its way and there is more than just a few certifications to talk about, since the latest renders that surfaced online look great and also reveal a few key design elements of the upcoming handset that is currently known by the model number XT-2117.
The aforementioned XT-2117 device will probably come out as the Motorola Moto G10 Play and seems to have a 6.5-inch flat display with a rather generous chin and a single punch hole that has been placed at the top left corner, so Moto G9 Play fans who love the center waterdrop might want to skip its successor.
The renders reveal a triple camera setup that is located inside a square camera bump, quite similar to the design approach used in the Moto G9 Play. The fingerprint sensor was moved from the back — which is the most convenient placement for many users, or at least for me — to the side. Old-school music lovers who would like to keep their headphones with 3.5 mm audio jack will be delighted to find out that the Moto G10 Play still has it, and is located on the top.
In addition to the above, there is also a bulletproof piece of information, namely the battery capacity of the Moto G10 Play, which has been revealed by the TÜV Rheinland certification documents: 4,850 mAh. Any other technical details are mere speculations at this stage, so feel free to hit the comments section and share your expectations.
Codrut Nistor - Senior Tech Writer - 6315 articles published on Notebookcheck since 2013
In my early school days, I hated writing and having to make up stories. A decade later, I started to enjoy it. Since then, I published a few offline articles and then I moved to the online space, where I contributed to major websites that are still present online as of 2021 such as Softpedia, Brothersoft, Download3000, but I also wrote for multiple blogs that have disappeared over the years. I've been riding with the Notebookcheck crew since 2013 and I am not planning to leave it anytime soon. In love with good mechanical keyboards, vinyl and tape sound, but also smartphones, streaming services, and digital art.