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Tech

Motorola Signature camera wins DXOMARK Gold Label with 164 score

DXOMARK ranks the Motorola Signature among the top smartphone cameras, proving that slim design no longer means compromising on low-light, video, or telephoto quality.

By
Shubham Sawarkar
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ByShubham Sawarkar
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I’m a tech enthusiast who loves exploring gadgets, trends, and innovations. With certifications in CISCO Routing & Switching and Windows Server Administration, I bring a sharp...
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Jan 8, 2026, 7:13 AM EST
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Motorola’s new Motorola Signature is arriving with the kind of flex that instantly grabs camera nerds and casual Instagram scrollers alike: DXOMARK has slapped a Gold Label on its camera system, crowning it the best shooter on an ultrathin phone among the devices it has tested so far, with a camera score of 164. In a space dominated by names like Apple, Google, and Samsung, seeing Motorola suddenly pop up this high in DXOMARK’s global rankings is a signal that the company is taking mobile imaging more seriously than it has in years.​

At the heart of this whole story is DXOMARK’s Gold Label itself. This isn’t a random marketing badge; DXOMARK runs phones through a standardized lab test suite that covers still photos, video, and zoom in everything from bright daylight to dim street corners. To get Gold, a device has to be among the best in its class on these metrics, and the Motorola Signature clears that bar in both photo and video, especially for exposure, color, and detail retention in challenging low-light scenes. In DXOMARK’s charts, the 164 score lands it in the top tier globally and sixth in the ultra-premium bracket, nudging ahead of some big-name flagships in overall camera performance.​

What makes this particularly interesting is that Motorola is doing it in an ultrathin chassis. The company positions the Motorola Signature as an “ultrathin” device—under 7mm thick—yet still manages to pack in serious camera hardware. DXOMARK’s label here is specific: among ultrathin phones in this segment that it has tested, the Motorola Signature is the one that delivers the best overall camera performance, which is why Motorola is so loudly leaning into that “best camera on an ultrathin phone” line. For buyers, that means you no longer have to choose between a sleek, slim design and a genuinely elite camera system, at least on paper.​

The hardware readout looks like something you’d expect from a spec-sheet arms race, but there’s some substance behind the numbers. Motorola is using four 50MP sensors across the rear and front, including a main 50MP Sony LYTIA 828 sensor that’s significantly larger and more advanced than what you’d find in older Motorola flagships. That Sony LYTIA 828 is designed for high dynamic range and low noise, with Sony quoting over 100dB of dynamic range—roughly 17 stops—which pushes it into territory usually associated with dedicated cameras and cinema-focused sensors. In practice, that’s meant to translate into skies that don’t blow out, shadows that don’t turn into mush, and more usable detail when you’re shooting backlit subjects or night scenes.​

Zoom is another big piece of why this phone is making waves. The Motorola Signature uses a 50MP periscope telephoto lens with 3x optical zoom, but Motorola pushes that out to 6x “optical lossless” zoom using clever cropping and processing, and then all the way to 100x digital zoom for those “because I can” moon shots. On top of that, there’s a Super Zoom Pro algorithm that kicks in from 20x and higher, using AI to clean up fine details and reduce the usual watercolor look you get from aggressive digital zoom. DXOMARK’s notes mention that detail is well preserved at telephoto focal lengths overall, although, like most phones, it still loses some fine detail at mid-range digital zoom levels.​

The rest of the camera stack fills out the versatility story. You get a 50MP ultrawide camera that doubles as a macro shooter, which is increasingly standard at the top end but still nice to see executed at this resolution. On the front, a 50MP selfie camera is tuned to produce punchy but natural-looking shots that are essentially “ready to post,” leaning on Motorola’s work with Pantone to keep skin tones in the realm of reality instead of turning faces into orange or pink caricatures. That Pantone validation is a subtle thing, but for a lot of creators and social media users, it matters that what you see on the display looks close to how things looked in real life.​

Video is where the Sony sensor and Motorola’s stabilization tech really flex. The Motorola Signature shoots up to 8K video with Dolby Vision, pairing the LYTIA 828’s high dynamic range with richer color and contrast mapping so your footage doesn’t look flat on HDR-capable displays. Motorola also touts a 3.5° optical image stabilization system—one of the most aggressive OIS implementations in this segment—combined with Adaptive Stabilization, which analyzes motion and adjusts how it compensates for shake on the fly. DXOMARK’s early notes call out smooth, stable video and low noise in many lighting conditions, with some caveats around occasional exposure instability and noise in very high-contrast video scenes.​

All of this is backed by Motorola’s Moto AI stack, which sits on top of Qualcomm’s Snapdragon 8 Gen 5 platform and essentially micro-manages each frame. Motorola’s own description is that the Photo Enhancement Engine runs “billions” of image operations in microseconds, blending multiple exposures, balancing shadows and highlights, and selectively tuning color and sharpness depending on the scene. DXOMARK’s lab work largely lines up with that marketing: it highlights precise auto-exposure, stable white balance, pleasing color, and low noise as key strengths, especially in portraits and low light, even if some noise and exposure wobble can still creep into video in tough situations.​

There’s also a social media angle that feels very 2026. Motorola has worked with third-party platforms so that when you post from apps like Instagram, your photos retain Ultra HDR quality instead of getting flattened or crushed during upload. The idea is that the vibrant, detailed images you see in the gallery should look essentially the same when they show up in someone’s feed, which is a real quality-of-life fix if you’ve ever watched a perfect HDR shot turn dull after posting. For creators who live inside social apps, that kind of end-to-end flow—shoot, lightly tweak, post, no nasty surprises—is arguably as important as pure lab scores.​

In the broader flagship landscape, the Motorola Signature’s DXOMARK Gold Label plants a flag for Motorola in a space where it hasn’t traditionally dominated. DXOMARK’s ranking shows it trading blows with heavy hitters like Google’s latest Pixel Pro and Apple’s iPhone 16 Pro series, and in some cases edging them out in combined photo/zoom/video scoring, even if not always across every sub-metric. Review coverage from outlets tracking the launch notes that the phone’s calling cards are low-light detail, consistent color, and a surprisingly strong telephoto, while weaknesses tend to revolve around some exposure instability and noise when you really push against bright backgrounds in video. That mix of strengths and trade-offs is normal at the top tier, but it’s noteworthy that Motorola is now part of that conversation instead of just chasing it.​

Zooming out, the motorola Signature is less about a single spec or badge and more about Motorola staking out a new identity in the premium space: ultrathin design, heavy imaging credentials, and long-term software support bundled together. The phone promises up to seven years of OS and security updates, which quietly puts it in the same longevity tier that Samsung and Google have been using as a differentiator, and that matters if you’re investing in a camera-first device you plan to keep. The DXOMARK Gold Label gives Motorola a clean, objective-sounding proof point to market that story, but for users, the real question will be whether the experience—especially in low light, zoom, and social sharing—feels as polished in daily life as the lab charts suggest.


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