NEWS
Moto G37 Power vs Oppo K14x vs Galaxy M17 5G: Which to Buy
Three 5G smartphones compete in Indian retail at prices from Rs. 14,499 to Rs. 18,999 as of May 2026: the Moto G37 Power with a 7,000mAh battery and Android 16 on board, the Oppo K14x 5G with 45W SuperVOOC fast charging, and the Samsung Galaxy M17 5G with a FHD+ Super AMOLED display and a six-year software support guarantee. Each phone wins a specific category. The question is which category matters most to the buyer making this decision.
Motorola’s G37 Power starts at Rs. 15,999 for 4GB+128GB, Rs. 1,000 above the Oppo K14x’s base and Rs. 1,500 above Samsung’s current ask for the same RAM-and-storage tier. At margins that thin, the hardware and software differences do the actual work of separating the three phones.
How the Prices Stack Up in India
None of the three phones occupies a standalone price tier. Oppo and Samsung overlap below Rs. 17,000, and the Moto G37 Power and Samsung share the Rs. 18,000-plus range. A buyer comparing 6GB configurations finds the Oppo K14x at Rs. 16,999 and the Galaxy M17 5G at Rs. 16,499, a Rs. 500 gap that makes the spec differences worth examining carefully.
| Model | 4GB Variant | 6GB Variant | 8GB Variant | On Sale Since |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Moto G37 Power | Rs. 15,999 | N/A | Rs. 18,999 | May 25, 2026 |
| Oppo K14x 5G | Rs. 14,999 | Rs. 16,999 | N/A | Feb 16, 2026 |
| Samsung Galaxy M17 5G | Rs. 14,499 | Rs. 16,499 | Rs. 18,499 | Oct 13, 2025 |
Samsung’s three-tier RAM ladder gives it the widest addressable range, from Rs. 14,499 to Rs. 18,499. Motorola skips the 6GB middle entirely, offering 4GB or 8GB only. For buyers comparing the 8GB tier, the G37 Power sits Rs. 500 above the Samsung at Rs. 18,999 against Rs. 18,499. Storage across all three variants starts at 128GB UFS 2.2 with microSD expansion up to 1TB, so capacity is not a differentiator here.

Display Technology: AMOLED Against LCD
Samsung’s Galaxy M17 5G is the only phone in this group with an AMOLED panel, and the advantage shows from the first use. Its 6.7-inch Super AMOLED screen resolves at FHD+ (1,080×2,340 pixels), producing true blacks through per-pixel shutoff and delivering contrast ratios that LCD cannot approach at any price. Brightness peaks at 1,100 nits in high brightness mode, protected by Corning Gorilla Glass Victus, a glass grade found on phones selling considerably above this price range. The trade-off is refresh rate: 90Hz, compared to 120Hz on both rivals. For social scrolling and daily navigation, 90Hz is smooth enough, but a side-by-side comparison shows a small perceptible difference in fluidity against a 120Hz panel.
Both the Moto G37 Power and the Oppo K14x 5G official specifications page confirm HD+ LCD panels at 120Hz, resolving at 720 pixels wide rather than 1,080. The G37 Power measures 6.67 inches with a 1,050-nit peak and Gorilla Glass 7i. Oppo’s display stretches to 6.75 inches at up to 1,125 nits, the brightest claimed figure in this group on paper. The resolution gap between HD+ and FHD+ is most apparent on fine text, small icons, and detailed photographs viewed up close. AMOLED’s per-pixel contrast, producing deep blacks that LCD cannot replicate, remains Samsung’s dominant visual advantage whenever the screen shows dark content or media.
The Galaxy M17 5G also carries Widevine L1 certification, allowing Netflix, Amazon Prime Video, and other streaming platforms to deliver HD-quality video to the device. Most budget LCD phones in this bracket receive only Widevine L3, which caps streaming resolution below HD regardless of the display’s native capability. For subscribers who stream video daily, this certification adds a practical layer of value beyond the panel type alone.
- FHD+ Super AMOLED, 1,080×2,340, 90Hz, 1,100 nits HBM, Gorilla Glass Victus: Samsung Galaxy M17 5G
- HD+ LCD, 720×1604, 120Hz, 1,050 nits HBM, Gorilla Glass 7i: Moto G37 Power
- HD+ LCD, 720×1570, 120Hz, 1,125 nits peak brightness: Oppo K14x 5G
Battery Capacity and Charging Speed
The Moto G37 Power carries a 7,000mAh cell, the largest in this group by 500mAh over the Oppo K14x and 2,000mAh over the Samsung. On a 6nm MediaTek chipset running an HD+ display at 120Hz, that capacity comfortably covers two days of moderate use or a full heavy day with power to spare. Motorola includes 6W reverse wired charging, letting the G37 Power top up earbuds or a smartwatch via USB-C. The Oppo K14x also supports 5W reverse charging. Samsung’s Galaxy M17 5G includes neither function.
Oppo’s 45W SuperVOOC charger ships inside the retail box and fills the 6,500mAh cell in approximately 90 minutes from empty. For buyers who charge in short daily windows rather than overnight, this refill speed is a genuine advantage over the Moto G37 Power’s 30W included adapter and a bigger one over the Samsung’s 25W ceiling.
Samsung does not include a charger in the Galaxy M17 5G’s retail box. A compatible 25W USB-C PD adapter costs roughly Rs. 700 to Rs. 1,200 at retail, adding to the effective out-of-pocket cost for buyers who do not already own one. Despite the smaller 5,000mAh cell and slower charging rate, published real-world reviews consistently show the M17 5G delivering more than a full day of mixed use, partly because the Exynos 1330 draws less sustained power than the Dimensity chips under light-to-moderate workloads and the AMOLED panel’s pixel-off state conserves energy during dark-content playback.
Build weight splits along battery lines. The Moto G37 Power weighs 215 grams, noticeably heavier than the Galaxy M17 5G at 192 grams and the Oppo K14x at 212 grams. The larger cell accounts for most of that mass difference. Buyers sensitive to single-handed weight may find Samsung’s slimmer 7.5mm frame and lighter body a comfort factor worth considering alongside the raw battery figures.
| Phone | Battery | Charging Speed | Charger in Box | Reverse Charging |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Moto G37 Power | 7,000mAh | 30W wired | Yes | 6W wired |
| Oppo K14x 5G | 6,500mAh | 45W SuperVOOC | Yes | 5W wired |
| Samsung Galaxy M17 5G | 5,000mAh | 25W wired | No | No |
Chipset, RAM, and Day-to-Day Performance
The MediaTek Dimensity 6400 (6nm) in the Moto G37 Power sits a step above the MediaTek Dimensity 6300 (6nm) powering the K14x 5G, offering slightly higher clock speeds and improved multi-core throughput. For everyday tasks, social feeds, streaming, messaging, and navigation, the gap is difficult to feel in use. Motorola offers 4GB or 8GB of LPDDR4x RAM with a virtual expansion ceiling of 12GB. Oppo provides 4GB or 6GB physical RAM, expandable virtually to 8GB. Both phones include 128GB UFS 2.2 storage with the same 1TB microSD cap, and both support RAM Boost-style virtual memory features to extend multitasking headroom.
Samsung’s Exynos 1330 (6nm) handles the Galaxy M17 5G with benchmark scores around 444,000 on AnTuTu v10, below both MediaTek chips on raw numbers, and real-world testing confirms occasional stuttering under heavy multitasking or sustained graphics load. For the everyday workload most buyers in this segment actually run, the Exynos 1330 is sufficient. Where the processor trails, One UI 7 compensates: Samsung bundles Circle to Search, Gemini Live voice assistance, and Voice Focus for call clarity, features absent from Motorola’s lighter Hello UI. Oppo’s ColorOS 15 adds AI Eraser for removing objects from photos and Dual-View Video, which fires the front and rear cameras simultaneously into a single shared frame.
Camera Systems Compared
Samsung builds the most versatile rear camera setup in this group. The M17 5G’s triple rear system leads with a 50MP OIS-equipped main sensor, supplemented by a 5MP ultrawide and a 2MP macro lens. OIS (Optical Image Stabilization) is uncommon at this price point: it absorbs hand tremor during handheld shots and video recording, producing sharper low-light stills and steadier footage compared to software stabilization alone. The 13MP selfie camera surpasses both rivals for portrait and video call detail.
Both the G37 Power and the Oppo K14x 5G use dual rear setups: a 50MP primary sensor paired with a secondary unit of limited practical value. Motorola’s second sensor combines ambient light sensing and flicker detection, offering no additional photography depth. Oppo’s 2MP monochrome sensor assists portrait processing in theory but adds little in typical shooting. The G37 Power’s 8MP front camera holds an edge over Oppo’s 5MP selfie shooter. All three phones shoot at least 1080p video from the rear; Motorola extends the ceiling to 2K at 30fps.
- Samsung Galaxy M17 5G: 50MP OIS + 5MP ultrawide + 2MP macro (rear); 13MP (front). Triple camera, optical stabilization, the strongest low-light and video performer here.
- Moto G37 Power: 50MP f/1.8 PDAF + 2-in-1 light sensor (rear); 8MP (front). Capable main shooter, no genuine ultrawide, solid selfie camera for the price.
- Oppo K14x 5G: 50MP f/1.8 + 2MP monochrome (rear); 5MP (front). AI-assisted editing via ColorOS 15, weakest front camera of the three.
In daylight, all three 50MP main sensors perform comparably for casual photography. The gap widens after dark. Without OIS, the G37 Power and K14x rely on software processing and higher ISO to compensate for movement, raising the likelihood of blurred subjects in dim conditions. Samsung’s OIS absorbs the micro-tremors that software cannot correct, making it the safer choice for travel captures, indoor events, and anyone who regularly photographs in artificial light.
Software Support and Long-Term Value
Samsung’s update commitment is the Galaxy M17 5G’s defining competitive advantage. From its October 2025 launch date, Samsung confirms six OS upgrades (through Android 21) and six years of security patches, with support running until September 2031. That timeline typically belongs to flagship Galaxy S devices. Extending it to a sub-Rs. 19,000 M-series phone is a notable policy decision, and no rival here comes close to matching it at this price tier. For a buyer who holds a phone four or five years, the M17 5G’s effective cost per year of supported use is substantially lower than an equivalent-priced device that gets replaced after two.
Motorola’s G37 Power ships on Android 16, one version ahead of both rivals at their respective launch points, confirming an upgrade path to Android 17 and three years of security updates from May 2026. Starting on a newer Android release provides a meaningful head start in app compatibility and feature access during the first year, but the shorter patch runway means the G37 Power reaches end of active support while the Galaxy M17 5G remains in Samsung’s update cycle.
Oppo has not published a specific multi-year update schedule for the K14x 5G. The phone’s “48 months of fluency protection” is a performance-optimization guarantee, not an Android version delivery promise. Based on Oppo’s budget-tier history in India, the K14x will likely receive one to two Android version upgrades and three years of security patches, broadly in line with the MediaTek-based competition in this bracket. Buyers who use banking apps, VPN clients, or enterprise tools that enforce minimum Android version requirements will encounter that boundary within three years.
For buyers who upgrade every 18 to 24 months, update policy differences fade quickly inside that window. For everyone else, the Galaxy M17 5G at Rs. 14,499 pairs an AMOLED display, OIS camera, NFC, and a six-year software runway in a 192-gram body that neither rival in this comparison can match on combined long-term value.
Frequently Asked Questions
Which Phone Has the Best Display Among These Three?
The Samsung Galaxy M17 5G has the superior display. Its 6.7-inch FHD+ Super AMOLED panel produces true blacks, deeper contrast, and sharper text than the HD+ LCD screens on the Moto G37 Power and Oppo K14x 5G. The only trade-off is refresh rate: 90Hz on the Samsung against 120Hz on both LCD rivals. For most everyday use, including streaming, browsing, and social media, the picture-quality advantage of AMOLED outweighs the lower refresh rate.
How Long Will Each Phone Receive Software Updates?
Samsung’s Galaxy M17 5G is confirmed for six Android OS upgrades and six years of security patches from its October 2025 launch, meaning support runs through 2031. The Moto G37 Power is confirmed for one OS upgrade (Android 17) and three years of security updates from May 2026. Oppo has not published a formal update schedule for the K14x 5G; based on Oppo’s budget-tier history, the phone will likely receive approximately two OS upgrades over three years.
When Does the Moto G37 Power Go on Sale in India?
The Moto G37 Power goes on sale in India starting May 25, 2026, through Flipkart and Motorola’s India website. Both the 4GB+128GB variant at Rs. 15,999 and the 8GB+128GB variant at Rs. 18,999 will be available at launch.
Which Phone Has the Best Camera in This Comparison?
The Samsung Galaxy M17 5G carries the most capable camera setup. It is the only phone in this group with a triple rear camera system, a 50MP OIS main sensor, a 5MP ultrawide, and a 2MP macro, plus a 13MP selfie camera. The OIS-equipped main sensor reduces motion blur in low light and during video recording, an advantage the Moto G37 Power and Oppo K14x 5G cannot match at this price point.
Which Phone Charges the Fastest?
The Oppo K14x 5G charges the fastest at 45W SuperVOOC, with the charger included in the retail box. The Moto G37 Power supports 30W wired charging, also with the charger included. Samsung’s Galaxy M17 5G charges at 25W and does not include a charger in the box.
Do All Three Phones Support NFC?
The Moto G37 Power and Samsung Galaxy M17 5G both include NFC for contactless payments through Google Pay, PhonePe, and similar platforms. The Oppo K14x 5G does not include NFC, which is a meaningful gap for users who rely on tap-to-pay or transit card payments.
Which Phone Has the Most Durable Build?
The Moto G37 Power is the most ruggedized of the three, combining an IP64 dust-and-splash resistance rating with MIL-STD-810H military-grade drop certification. The Oppo K14x 5G also holds an IP64 rating without the MIL-STD certification. The Samsung Galaxy M17 5G has a lower IP54 rating but uses Corning Gorilla Glass Victus on the front, the strongest screen glass in this group.
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