Motorola is preparing to launch a new round of foldable smartphones. The refreshed Motorola RAZR series is due for an upgrade that will come in the form of the RAZR 50 and RAZR 50 Ultra soon. The former recently passed the TENAA certification in China. The Motorola RAZR 50 Ultra has received a certification in China as well, but this time, it passed the 3C certification.
Motorola RAZR 50 Ultra Details Spotted at 3C Certification
The Motorola RAZR 50 Ultra passed China’s Compulsory Certification (3C) which confirmed 68W fast-charging support. That means the RAZR 50 Ultra will bring a nice upgrade over its predecessor. The last year’s RAZR 40 Ultra had just 30W charging support. So the upcoming model will offer more than twice the charging speed of its predecessor. This is also a relevant milestone for Motorola, which leaves dust to Samsung and its 25W charging commonly offered by the Z Fold and Z Flip series.
Gizchina News of the week
Apart from the charging speed, the certification does not bring more details regarding the foldable smartphone. According to past leaks, the Motorola RAZR 50 Ultra will sport a 6.9-inch Folding Display with Full HD+ resolution and 165 Hz refresh rate. The phone also has a 4-inch P-OLED cover display, two 50 MP cameras, a 32 MP selfie snapper, and a 4,000 mAh battery. Last but not least, it should include IPX8 water resistance.
The RAZR 50 Ultra is said to sport Qualcomm’s Snapdragon 8s Gen 3 SoC. It will sell with up to 12 GB of RAM and up to 256 GB of Internal Storage. The phone is rumored to launch in the next month alongside the vanilla variant. They will likely carry the Razr and Razr+ names in North America.
We expect more details to appear soon for the Motorola Razr 50 and Razr 50 Ultra. With the new devices, Motorola continues its aggressive push into the range of clamshell foldable smartphones. It is worth noting that the 50 Ultra is a direct competitor for the Samsung Galaxy Z Flip6, and perhaps, the biggest one in the US market. We are curious to see if there will be surprises left for the release.