Skip to main content
  1. Home
  2. Phones
  3. Mobile
  4. Features

The Razr 2022 showed me what the Razr 2023 needs to be incredible

Add as a preferred source on Google

Motorola has three compact folding smartphones, the most recent being the Motorola Razr (2022). Now, a fourth model is being rumored for release in the near future. The Razr (2022) improved on the second-gen model (the Razr 5G), and after using it for the past week, I can see what needs to change to make any replacement worthy of purchasing over the Samsung Galaxy Z Flip 4 or the Oppo Find N2 Flip.

Here are five things the Motorola Razr (2023) needs to make it a success.

Recommended Videos

Always-on cover screen

Motorola Moto Razr (2022) showing a video on the cover screen.
Andy Boxall/Digital Trends

The Motorola Razr (2022)’s cover screen is almost perfect, and considerably better than the Galaxy Z Flip 4 and Find N2 Flip’s outer screens, all because of one thing — it can run apps. That’s right, if you want to reply to WhatsApp messages or even watch a YouTube video with the phone closed, you can. Try that on any other flip smartphone.

Unfortunately, there’s one thing missing that means the screen falls short of perfection: It doesn’t have an always-on setting. This means you can’t glance to see the time or waiting notifications without interacting with the phone, and it’s a massive pain. Even the iPhone has an always-on screen nowadays, so there’s no excuse for it not to be available here.

Apps on the Motorola Moto Razr (2022)'s cover screen.
Andy Boxall/Digital Trends

Provided Motorola adds this to the Razr (2023), and only enhances any app support on the outer screen rather than changing to a largely useless widget system like the competition, it’ll potentially be the compact folding smartphone to beat.

Tidy up the hinges

The open Motorola Moto Razr (2022)'s hinge.
Andy Boxall/Digital Trends

Whether it’s folded or unfolded, and regardless of that fact that it’s actually quite clever, the Motorola Razr 2022’s hinge looks messy. It may have been updated from the previous models, but in either orientation, the inner workings are too exposed, and the crevices soon get filled with dust and other detritus. There’s no simple way to clean inside these little gaps either.

The hinge holds itself half-open, but there is a lot of flex. It’s steady, but there’s an unnerving amount of wobble, accompanied by noise from the hinge when you go to open or close it fully. It doesn’t inspire much confidence and makes the phone feel a little cheap. By tightening it up and better concealing the gaps, the Razr 2023 will look and feel like a higher-quality product.

Current software, fast updates

Android 12 shown on the Motorola Moto Razr (2022)'s screen.
Andy Boxall/Digital Trends

It’s the end of March 2023 as I write this, and the Razr 2022 in my hand still has Android 12 installed. That’s simply not good enough. Android 13 was released in August 2022, around the same time as the Razr 2022, so it was too much to expect it to launch with the latest software installed. However, that was seven months ago, which is ample time for Motorola to deliver an update, and it has failed to do that.

This has to change for the next Razr phone. If Motorola follows an annual release schedule, and we see the next Razr around August, it’ll likely run Android 13. That’s understandable, given the timing and Android 14’s potential release, but an update needs to arrive before 2024 if it’s to be taken seriously. It also needs to clarify its update policy for the new phone, and to compete with the Z Flip 4 and Find N2 Flip, it should support the phone with major updates for at least three years.

Release it globally

A person holding the open Motorola Moto Razr (2022), seen from the back.
Andy Boxall/Digital Trends

The Motorola Razr 2022 is available to buy in the U.K. and Europe, but not in the U.S. Motorola’s release plans — and the models it makes for different regions — have been confusing for a while. It was an unusual decision not to release the Razr 2022 in the U.S., as it left the Galaxy Z Flip 4 to command the market.

I’m sure there are complex business reasons for not giving the Razr 2022 a wider release, but whatever they are, it would be good to see them solved in the future. Motorola will be unchallenged by Oppo in the U.S., unlike in the U.K., and those wanting a compact folding phone would finally get a choice of models.

Give it an IP rating

The Motorola Moto Razr (2022)'s open screen.
Andy Boxall/Digital Trends

There’s not really any excuse to avoid getting an IP rating on a folding smartphone, and it was one of the few details that caused a markdown in our Oppo Find N2 Flip review. The Razr 2022 does not have a formal water- and dust-resistance rating, although Motorola says it’s “water repellant,” but when the Galaxy Z Flip 4 has an IPX8 rating, this isn’t really good enough.

Obtaining dust resistance certification on a folding smartphone is a serious challenge, but adding durability through validated water resistance and strong materials increases confidence, which is an important part of attracting people to these still-new devices. For its next folding smartphone, Motorola would be wise to add an IPX8 rating.

Motorola could have a winner

A person opening the Motorola Moto Razr (2022).
Andy Boxall/Digital Trends

The Motorola Razr (2022) is a great smartphone, hobbled mostly by the old software and its limited release, and it deserves more attention than it has received. There are only a few changes Motorola needs to make to ensure the Razr (2023) doesn’t end up being forgotten in the same way.

Outside of these five important changes we want to see in the Moto Razr (2023), Motorola otherwise needs to improve the camera, which is decent but far from excellent on the Razr (2022), use the latest and fastest processor (the Qualcomm Snapdragon 8+ Gen 1 is a great addition to the current Razr), and get the most from the battery. I’ve been pleasantly surprised by the battery life from the Razr (2022), provided I didn’t push it too hard, and have easily managed more than a day’s use on a single charge.

The Razr (2022) shows Motorola knows how to make a desirable folding smartphone, but the problems it has also show it hasn’t quite figured out the right formula for a flagship device, despite years of experience. The Razr (2023) will be its chance to change that. Motorola has confirmed that a new Razr foldable is “coming soon,” so we shouldn’t be waiting too long to see if Motorola is up to the challenge of making what could be one of the year’s best folding phones.

Andy Boxall
Andy has written about mobile technology for almost a decade. From 2G to 5G and smartphone to smartwatch, Andy knows tech.
Android desktop mode made me miss my laptop in record time
I tried writing and publishing from Google’s phone-to-monitor setup, and the future of mobile computing immediately started sweating.
Computer, Electronics, Laptop

Android 17 desktop mode has a very simple pitch. Plug your phone into a monitor, add a keyboard and mouse, and watch the slab in your pocket pretend to be a computer. I wanted to give that pitch a fair shot, so I tried using it for an actual workday instead of a cute demo.

The goal was boring on purpose: write an article, edit it, build the page in WordPress, upload whatever needed uploading, and publish the thing without running back to my laptop like a coward.

Read more
After test-driving iOS 27, my iPhone still doesn’t feel like it has made a substantial leap
Siri learned new tricks. Safari got smarter tabs. My morning routine didn't change at all.
iOS 27 new star rating feature in Photos

Every June, after Apple wraps up its annual WWDC keynote, I install the latest iOS beta on my iPhone, watch the progress bar crawl to completion, and wait for the inevitable restart. For years, picking up my phone afterward felt almost identical to how it did before the update. 

I saw the same grid of icons, the same Control Center, and the same version of Siri until iOS 26 finally broke that pattern in 2025.

Read more
Android 17 makes a strong case for ignoring Android version numbers entirely
When the most noticeable change is a better Quick Settings button, the annual update cycle starts looking more like branding than progress.
Android 17 logo.

Android 17 finally separated the Wi-Fi and mobile data buttons, and I hate how much that improved my mood. For years, Android treated internet access like one mysterious blob, as if Wi-Fi and cellular data were emotionally codependent. In Android 17 Beta 3, Google split the old combined Internet button into separate Wi-Fi and mobile data tiles, making each connection easier to switch off with a single tap.

That’s a good change, which is also why it’s a little damning. When one of the cleanest wins in a major OS update is “the buttons make sense again,” the celebration gets awkward fast.

Read more