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Realme C71 surfaces in benchmark and certifications

Realme C71 surfaces in benchmark and certifications

GSM Arena20-05-2025

Realme is working on the low-end C71 to succeed the C61 launched last summer. The C71 has been spotted in the Geekbench online database with the model number RMX5303. It's powered by the Unisoc T7250 SoC, formerly known as the Unisoc T615.
This is a 4G-only chip, so don't expect the C71 to bring 5G to the table. Then again, the C61 didn't have it either. The C71 has 6GB of RAM, which its predecessor also offered. It will run Android 15 when it launches, with Realme UI on top.
The C71 has also been certified for sale in Malaysia by SIRIM, which confirms its aforementioned model number. A previous certification revealed its 45W wired charging support.
Unfortunately, no other specs are known at this time. Overall, we expect it to be a minor upgrade over the C61 while playing in the same pricing ballpark. We'll let you know when we find out more about it. Realme C61
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Motorola Razr (2025) vs Razr Ultra (2025): one is a pretty cover, the other is the whole package
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But here's the real question: if you're looking at Motorola's foldable lineup, is the Ultra worth the Ultra price tagover the standard Razr? Or is the regular Razr good enough? Let's dive in — spec sheets are fine, but how these phones feel, look, and perform in the hand matters more. $200 off (13%) The Motorola Razr Ultra is here, and the official store has a splendid deal to help you celebrate it! For a limited time, you can buy the 1TB variant at the price of the 512GB model, which saves you $200. Select colors are available right now. Buy at Motorola The Motorola Razr+ (2025) has finally been announced. You can buy the high-end flip phone with a Snapdragon 8s Gen 3 chip at the Motorola Store. You can trade in an eligible device to score some savings. Buy at Motorola Don't want to pay top dollar for your next flip phone? Consider the Motorola Razr (2025), now available for purchase. The handset features a MediaTek Dimensity 7400X chip and sports AI features. Buy at Motorola Motorola Razr 2025 vs Razr Ultra 2025 differences explained: Table of Contents: Design and Display Performance and Software Camera Battery Audio Specs Conclusion Both Razrs follow the same DNA and come in as elegant lifestyle accessories first. This is due to Motorola always picking fresh colors in partnership with color expert Pantone. But it's not just the hues — Razr and Edge phones come with different stylish finishes on the back, not just the boring old glass. First, Motorola started dressing its phones in vegan leather. Now, the Ultra models also get wood or velvet covers, which is pretty neat! But even if you go for the base Razr 2025, you will still get a faux leather-covered shell, or stylish latex wrapping. Depending on which color you choose, it'll have different patterns over it. The Razr (2025) comes in: Pantone Gibraltar Sea (dark blue) Pantone Spring Bud (green) Pantone Lightest Sky (cream) Pantone Parfait Pink (pink) The Razr Ultra is available in the following colors: Pantone Scarab (black, with a leather/velvet back) Pantone Rio Red Pantone Mountain Trail (wooden back) Pantone Cabaret Both phones feel pretty nice to handle and open / close. Motorola has been working on that hinge for a while now and it incorporates titanium elements that will hopefully make it last longer. It certainly feels sturdy and both phones open and close with pleasing snaps, and are able to hold the screen open at multiple angles. You'd expect some trade-offs between models, but this these are quite close. The Razr Ultra has a 7.0-inch internal display with 165 Hz refresh rate, while the regular Razr "settles" for a 6.9-inch panel at 120 Hz. OLED panels, of course, with a few different color profiles to pick from — from natural and grounded, to punchy, vibrant and saturated. 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Still, both are usable in the typical Motorola style — there are useful widgets to be found here, but you can launch full apps if you so desire. Android will re-scale them to fit (most of the time). The fingerprint scanners on both phones are located in the power button — they work lightning fast on both, even if it's not the most optimal positioning. Here's where things get spicy. The Razr Ultra is powered by the Snapdragon 8 Gen 3 Elite, backed by a hefty 16 GB of RAM and 512 GB storage out of the box. The regular Razr? Well, it cuts some corners and ends up with the far less powerful MediaTek Dimensity 7400X, 8 GB RAM, and 256 GB storage. Daily use? Both are OK, though if you engage with the AI more often, the Snapdragon definitely feels faster — of course. Once you start gaming, video editing, or multitasking like a maniac, the Ultra's extra horsepower becomes very real. The Motorola Razr 2025 is only here as your daily communicator, not the pocket computer experience. And yeah, if you ever doubted it, the CPU benchmarks show that the Razr Ultra is up to 3 times faster — barely any surprise there. While the regular Razr's score looks quite bad in comparison, we do emphasize that it runs daily tasks just fine. In the graphics department, the Ultra is three to five times better — depending on whether it's throttling or not. Considering it's a clamshell smartphone, we do find its thermals to be doing a pretty decent job at keeping it productive! Motorola gave both Razrs a 50 MP main camera, but the Ultra doubles down with a 50 MP ultrawide, while the regular Razr gets… a 13 MP secondary sensor. It's also worth noting that these 50 MP main cameras are not the same — the Ultra's sensor is bigger than the one in the vanilla Razr, and you will spot that in the samples below. On the front, the Razr Ultra triples down with yet another 50 MP camera, while the Razr (2025) has the still respectable 32 MP resolution for selfies. All that's left is to see how they do! As can be seen from our camera score, that main camera makes quite the difference. Despite both being 50 MP, the base Razr fell short with more oversharpening and artifacts. Both ultra-wide cameras scored about the same, despite their vast differences in hardware. And both phones don't do well with zooming, though with different issues. Let's look at the samples: Both cameras deal well with wide dynamics, but the Ultra does allow itself to amp up highlights just a bit more. Color reproduction from both is pretty down to earth and pleasant, with just a tinge of saturation to make that photo shareable on social media. However, when it comes to detail, the Ultra definitely takes it — fine details are visible, but soft and natural. Whereas the 50 MP snapper of the Razr (2025) presents a lot of oversharpening, even in the perfect lit conditions. These phones don't have dedicated zoom cameras, so any magnification they give you is a digital crop-in. The Razr Ultra tops out at 30x, but you won't be using it — it's pretty degraded at that point. The Razr (2025) maxes out at 10x, and it's very fuzzy there, too. At 2x (the samples above), they are both quite usable. Though, the base Razr's tendency to oversharpen is amplified, while the Ultra photo still looks good. Here's a comparison at 10x: As mentioned at the start of the camera section, their zooms are bad for different reasons. The base Razr has a lot of noise. The Razr Ultra photo looks "cleaner" at first glance because it applies a ton of noise reduction. As a result, the image becomes washed-out, painting-like. We won't be knocking these a lot — they are not zoom camera phones and not marketed as such. The ultra-wide camera of the Ultra presents a bit more neon-y colors in the skies but definitely has a much better dynamic range and slightly better details. The ultra-wide of the Razr (2025) has more natural colors, but is darker, crushes shadows, and it shows a lot more HDR bloom than the one on the Razr Ultra does. The selfie camera of the Razr (2025) is a bit too warm, a bit too red, and a bit too soft. Not bad in general, but when compared side-by-side, the Razr Ultra selfie looks more realistic and sharper. The video quality of the Razr Ultra is hands-down just better. Colors are more realistic, details are slightly sharper, the stabilization is more... stable, and the microphone does a better job at noise reduction. The Razr (2025) video, in comparison, looks murky, the grass is a bit too saturated, the sky is a weird dark hue, and its microphone is noisier. It's still usable, but loses in this side-by-side. The Motorola Razr Ultra has a slightly bigger body, which allows it to fit a slightly bigger battery — 4,700 mAh. That's not a huge difference from the 4,500 mAh cell of the base Razr (2025), however there's another factor to consider — the processors. The Snapdragon 8 Elite is built on a 3 nm process, which is more energy-efficient than the 4 nm process of the MediaTek Dimensity 7400X. But then again, the Dimensity should require less power, since it's not as big of a monster. So, we went into our tests with curiosity: With a massive 24 hour endurance in our browsing test, the Razr Ultra shows that it can comfortably be a 2-day phone with casual use. Curiously, it fell behind in the video streaming test, where it should've scored another easy win. But then, at the gaming test, it lasted 3 hours longer than the base Razr, showing that even though that Snapdragon is a fire breather, the Ultra still makes good use of the energy it has on hand. The Razr Ultra is also a bit faster to charge — 30 minutes on a 68 W charger got us up to 80%! 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Just the other day, I had the pleasure of reviewing the mid-range Motorola Razr (2025), and the verdict was rather clear: it's a bargain phone that cuts the right number of corners to achieve its super-affordable price tag that make it an appealing buy. It's perfectly clear that's precisely what other manufacturers need to do to bolster the sales of their foldable phones. But the Razr isn't just a clamshell foldable with a colorful design language and just little to no party tricks: it's a fairly decent mid-range phone that doesn't run away from its inherent nature: it wears its heart on its sleeve and is easily the one phone you should try out if you've been curious about foldables but didn't want to splurge on the more premium specimens. What exactly makes the Moto Razr (2025) a good phone despite the humble specs? It's simple, really: this device is the most affordable way to experience foldable phones instead of going all-in on a Galaxy Z Flip 6 or its successor. I know, these are by no means a new device category, but even more than half a decade since we saw the first devices hit the shelves, foldables are definitely more of a rarity rather than common. Foldable simply are not as common as the tech blogosphere tries to persuade us. As per the latest intelligence reports, the market penetration of foldable phones exactly a year ago was just 1.5%, and I can't imagine it has grown immensely since then. And while it's true that experiencing the low-cost version of something doesn't really deliver the ultimate experience, it can very well create a grounded foundation for your expectations. The experience of using the Motorola Razr isn't really indicative of what an Oppo Find N5 or a Huawei Mate XT feel like, true, but this value-for-money trooper will still successfully show you whether foldables are worth it in the first place. Starting at $700, the Motorola Razr (2025) already sets a fairly low bar for your expectations. While it's true that great phones exist at even lower price points, seeing the price tag here immediately soothes your desire to criticize and find faults. And faults, there are many here. Don't expect the best camera, just a pair of wide and ultrawide snappers that will get the job done but nothing else; video isn't great either. But what's probably the biggest issue with this phone and one of the bigger corners that have been cut is the chipset and its unimpressive performance. That's the key part here, as while you might not have to capture masterpieces with the camera every day, you will have to suffer the consequences of the modest MediaTek chipset paired with the slow storage inside. Gaming and heavier multitasking simply aren't enjoyable here. I tried playing some Balatro, which is not a perfect port that makes even seasoned Android flagships warm to the touch, the experience here was just not good: the phone got too hot, frames began dropping towards the endgame, and the overall experience was suboptimal, and let's not mention the immense battery life drop-off. The same applies to other 3D games I tried: they run, but you will quickly understand that this is by no means a gaming phone. What's there to like, then? It seems that all the core aspects of a good phone are disappointing here, right? Well, no. It has a lovely display with just a slight crease, which is absolutely normal for any foldable, no matter the brand or the model. It's moderately pronounced, but not distractingly so, making it a non-issue. At the same time, the screen is bright and vivid. And the outer screen is quite useful. You can pin multiple apps to it and not only check notifications and control most features of the phone, but also use those apps on the tiny outer screen. Sure, it's hardly as useful as the outer screens on the book-style foldables out there, but none of those can match the ultra-compact size of this Motorola either. Just flip the video and gaming results and the two are fairly comparable The design is also something I didn't know I'd like so much. There's this stigma around clamshell flip phones. It feels as they are perceived as more feminine and are often marketed towards women because why wouldn't a man want to use a larger foldable device? Well, damn whoever raises that point with me again, as using a compact flip phone like this one showed me that foldables shouldn't tear holes in your pockets. A compact device like this one just blends so seamlessly with my daily usage that I struggled to let it go and return to the other daily-driver slab of monstrosity I'm using right now. I'm not a die-hard Motorola fan and never have been, but this Motorola Razr almost converted me. It's perfectly aware of its shortcomings and doesn't try to hide them away, which made the overall experience so much better. If you've ever talked yourself out of trying out a foldable phone , give this one a spin: it doesn't cost a fortune and will show you that this phone category is more than ready for the prime-time.

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