Motorola's Razr Fold: First Book-Style Phone Revealed
- Motorola introduced the Razr Fold, its first book-style foldable, marking a shift from years of clamshell designs.
- The company also teased a wearable AI concept alongside the Razr Fold, but provided few details.
- Motorola (owned by Lenovo Group Ltd.) did not disclose specs, pricing, or a release date; it says more information will arrive in the coming months.
- The Razr Fold positions Motorola to compete more directly with Samsung’s Galaxy Z Fold line.
What Motorola announced
Motorola unveiled the Razr Fold, a new handset that opens like a small book or passport instead of folding into a clamshell. The device represents the company’s first foray into the book-style foldable category after several years of flip-style Razr devices.
The company offered only a high-level preview and no specific technical specifications. Motorola said it will publish more details and timelines in the coming months.
Design and positioning
Early images and company statements indicate the Razr Fold follows the larger, tablet-like foldable form factor popularized by rival products. Motorola framed the device as a direct challenge to established book-style foldables, including Samsung’s Galaxy Z Fold series.
The shift signals a strategic pivot by Motorola — now part of Lenovo Group Ltd. — toward a broader foldable portfolio intended to cover both clamshell and book-style form factors.
Wearable AI concept
Alongside the Razr Fold reveal, Motorola also showcased a wearable AI concept. Details were sparse and the company described the device as a concept rather than an imminent product.
This move follows industry trends at recent trade shows, where vendors have blended hardware demonstrations with AI-driven features to gauge consumer interest.
What Motorola hasn’t said
Motorola did not disclose key details: processor, display specifications, battery life, cameras, price or a launch date. The company said it plans to reveal more information in the months ahead.
That leaves unanswered questions for buyers and reviewers about how Motorola’s implementation will compare to Samsung, Google and other competitors already shipping mature book-style foldables.
Next steps and what to watch
Expect Motorola to share specification sheets, performance metrics and pricing as part of staged announcements. Watch for hands-on reviews and comparisons once more complete information is released.
For consumers, the Razr Fold preview signals expanding choice in the foldable market and suggests intensified competition between Motorola (Lenovo) and Samsung in the premium device segment.