Pros
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Big, actually-useful 3.6" cover screen that runs apps, so you can reply, check maps, control music, and even use Gemini without opening the phone.
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Solid flip-phone endurance from a 4,200 mAh battery plus 30W wired and wireless charging; rated water-resistant (IPX8).
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Friendly price for a modern flip ($699 in the U.S.) and a clean, lightweight Android experience.
Cons
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Mid-tier MediaTek Dimensity 7300X can feel sluggish next to Snapdragon 8-series rivals.
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Cameras are fine in daylight but inconsistent in low light and can be slow to capture.
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Shorter software support than Samsung (Motorola promises three OS upgrades / four years of security).
On top of:
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Motorola Razr (2023) / Razr 40
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Samsung Galaxy Z Flip 4
Behind of:
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Motorola Razr 50 Ultra (Razr Plus 2024) — faster chip, larger 4" cover screen.
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Samsung Galaxy Z Flip 6 — flagship Snapdragon performance and seven years of updates.
Summary
For North American buyers, the Razr 50 (sold here as the motorola razr 2024) hits a sweet spot: a fun, compact flip with a genuinely useful outer display, all-day battery, water resistance, and an accessible $699 price. The trade-offs are predictable—midrange speed and average cameras—so power users and shutterbugs should step up to the Razr 50 Ultra or Samsung’s Flip 6. But if you want the flip-phone vibe without paying four figures, this is the one to beat in that price tier.
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