Motorola Edge+ – Design and Features
The Motorola Edge+ has been freed from the shackles of the Moto Z family, no longer having to conform to strict shape and size guidelines to continue supporting Motorola’s fleet of Moto Mod attachments. The result is a phone that looks a lot more like the premium handsets that surround it in the market, with some similarity to Samsung’s previous generation of Galaxy S phones before Samsung brought back flat screens with the Galaxy S20 family. You’ll find Gorilla Glass 5 on both sides of the phone sandwiching a 6000-Series aluminum frame. The glass of the display also wraps around the sides of the chassis, leaving minimal bezels at the top and bottom. Motorola delivers a punch-hole camera in the top-left corner instead of relying on a notch like Apple’s iPhone 11 Pro or LG’s flagships. Motorola also notes a “Water repellant design” that falls short of the more rigorous IP68 ratings found on many other flagship phones. The Motorola Edge+ has a large footprint at 161.1mm x 71.38mm x 9.6mm and 203 grams, which lets it fit in a 6.7-inch OLED display and a 5,000mAh battery. In terms of size, it would compare closer to the Samsung Galaxy S20 Ultra or S20+ than it would to the Galaxy S20. It’s not just glass that wraps around the sides either, but actually an active display area as well, making for an effect that can look cool in some situations or just wonky as visuals warp around the edge. The display itself is a sharp enough 2,340 x 1,080 and boasts a 90Hz refresh rate for a smoother feel. The display is impressively bright, offering easier readability in direct sunlight next to the Galaxy S20 at max brightness. It also supports HDR10+. And, if you need to connect to another display, the UBS-C port supports DisplayPort. The design of the Motorola Edge+ has many aspects that reflect the current flagship landscape, including a fingerprint sensor built into the display, a slim earpiece speaker for fairly robust stereo sound, and support for wireless charging (and reverse wireless charging). It bucks one industry trend by including a 3.5mm headphone jack, albeit without any of the fancy DAC enhancements LG offers. Motorola has also gone all in on modern internals. You’ll find the necessary components to get 5G (both mmWave and Sub-6GHz), as well as support for Wi-Fi 6, Bluetooth 5.1, and NFC. You won’t miss out on much in terms of connectivity here except for the fact that Verizon’s current 5G rollout is incredibly limited, meaning very few people will be able to take advantage of the Motorola Edge+’s 5G connectivity within the US for some time. While the Motorola Edge+ design feels solid overall, there are a few points where it could be improved. A few issues stem from the way the glass and metal all fit together. There’s a considerable gap between the display and frame, which allows for debris to get lodged, and it also makes for wobbly side buttons that don’t inspire confidence. The phone is a bit slippery as well.Motorola Edge+ – Software
The Motorola Edge+ comes running on Android 10 out of the box and is mostly free of bloatware despite its close ties with Verizon. There will be a few Verizon apps and games pre-installed, but it will otherwise run Google apps as its defaults and feature just a few of Motorola’s enhancements, such as the ever-handy Moto Actions (which offer two of the easiest ways to launch the camera app or toggle on the flashlight with simple hand movements). This time around, Motorola also has baked in some software to make use of the display’s edges. This includes setting it to light up for notifications, a game mode that adds shoulder buttons to the edge, a floating toolbar that lives on the edge, and a button that can stop some apps from extending over the edge so that you can more easily see all the content (which shows Motorola knows the edge isn’t always as practical as it is nifty).Motorola Edge+ – Gaming and Performance
Thanks to Motorola’s inclusion of the top-notch Snapdragon 865 chipset with 12GB LPDDR5, the Motorola Edge+ is a performance powerhouse. The octa-core processor paired with a 90Hz display makes it that much easier to feel just how smoothly this phone operates. In side-by-side Geekbench 5 tests, it outperformed the Samsung Galaxy S20 with a 909 single-core score and a 3340 multi-core score to the Galaxy’s 903 and 3140, respectively. Launching and switching between apps is a breeze, and the phone easily runs graphically intensive games like Asphalt 9. Even the camera launches quickly, making it that much easier to snap a photo in the moment. Scrolling around and zooming in on 108MP photos is also fluid and responsive. Some of that speed may come down the Motorola Edge+’s 256GB of UFS 3.0 storage. Launching Asphalt 9, the game was running and ready to play in less than 10 seconds. The battery performance was also satisfactory – 5,000mAh is a lot to work with. Even with such a large and bright display, the Motorola Edge+ can handle running all day on its beefy battery. However, it’s worth noting that I was running on 4G LTE throughout my testing, and using Verizon’s 5G mmWave network has been more power intensive in my experience. The 5G modem that’s paired with the Snapdragon 865 chipset may be more efficient than the one found in Motorola’s 5G Moto Mod, though. [widget path="global/article/imagegallery" parameters="albumSlug=motorola-edge-image-samples&captions=true"]Motorola Edge+ – Camera
The cameras on the Motorola Edge+ are a notable feature. The old, circular camera bump found on so many Motorola phones is gone. In its place, you’ll find a serious array of cameras. Here are the key specs:- 108MP, 1/1.33” sensor, f/1.8, 0.8 micron pixels with Quad Pixel Technology, OIS
- 16MP Ultra-wide + Macro Vision, f/2.2, 1 micron pixels, 117-degree FOV
- 8MP Telephoto, f/2.4, 1-micron pixels, 3X optical zoom, OIS
- TOF sensor
- 25MP Front-facing, F/2.0, 0.9 micron pixels with Quad Pixel Technology
Purchasing Guide
The Motorola Edge+ is available exclusively from Verizon for $999.from IGN Reviews https://ift.tt/2D32Fqg
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