Steal this Cellular Trail Camera for $50

Get a two pack of Moultrie Mobile Edge cell cams for $88 during prime day

Share

We may earn revenue from the products available on this page and participate in affiliate programs. Learn More

Prime Day ended on October 9, but this trail camera is still at a great price. A $50 trail camera usually has questionable reliability, but the Moultrie Mobile Edge is one of the best trail cameras we’ve tested. It’s not as good as the updated model released this year, but it’s still a reliable camera with a great price. And at $99 for a two pack it’s a great buy.

Compare that price to $150 at Bass Pro Shops and it’s obvious that this is an insanely good deal.

Why We Like the Moultrie Mobile Edge

If you don’t have time to read our full cellular trail camera test, here’s the short version of why this camera did well in our test.

The Mobile Edge has an app that’s designed with image recognition, so it identifies deer (including bucks vs. does), turkeys, vehicles, and humans in photos. That filters your photos for you so you can narrow in on the photos you want to see and none of the local raccoon population. It also tracks deer activity for you. When editor-in-chief, Alex Robinson, was testing the Edge, it told him that the best buck activity was around 6 a.m. Robinson ended up shooting a really nice buck that season using data from the Moultrie camera.

Aside from a powerful app, it has good shutter speed and photo quality. The sale is for the older version of Mobile Edge, which is the one we tested, and the new version is three times the sale price. If you have to have the best of the best, get the new one. But if you’re good with a reliable camera that takes decent photos, the original Mobile Edge is the way to go. Especially for $50.

Scott Einsmann Avatar

Scott Einsmann

Executive Gear Editor

Scott Einsmann is Outdoor Life’s gear editor. He oversees the gear team’s editors and writers who are subject matter experts in bows, knives, hunting, fishing, backpacking, and more. He lives in Richmond, Virginia with his wife and two bird dogs.

WHY YOU CAN TRUST OUTDOOR LIFE