logo
How is Motorola simultaneously doing too little and too much with the confusing Edge family?

How is Motorola simultaneously doing too little and too much with the confusing Edge family?

Phone Arenaa day ago

I'm sure that you all know the names of the top two smartphone vendors in the US, but if I ask you who the market's third-largest player is, you're probably going to have to think a little... and may still get the answer wrong. The same goes for the number two foldable smartphone vendor in Europe as of Q1 2025 (only ranked behind Samsung), and if you're wondering what those achievements could have in common, you should know they belong to the same company. Clearly, Motorola is doing well both stateside and on the old continent and both in the foldable segment and as far as the mobile industry as a whole is concerned. But could the Lenovo-owned brand do even better in terms of sales volumes across the entire world? I think so, and the latest rumor regarding its next (non-foldable) flagship highlights one of the biggest hurdles the veteran handset maker needs to clear in order to step things up and become a serious rival for Samsung and Apple.
I know what (some of) you are going to say. You don't care about marketing or branding, the only thing you look at when you're thinking of buying a new phone is just how good the phone is. But let's be honest here for a second - no one has the time and energy to do research on dozens and dozens of "different" devices, many of which look incredibly similar at first glance. That might be one of the reasons why so many people only seriously consider the iPhone 16 family and Samsung Galaxy S25 series when exploring their high-end options right now. Those are also pretty expansive, but they're easy to understand even for the least tech-savvy buyers out there.
The Edge 60 Pro is... not a true flagship. | Image Credit -- PhoneArena But if the Edge 50 Ultra is a thing, that means a Galaxy S25 Ultra -rivaling Edge 60 Ultra has to be just around the corner, right? According to the legendary Evan Blass, that is in fact wrong, with Motorola instead working on the Edge 70 Ultra already. While common sense would seem to dictate a 2026 launch for the entire Edge 70 family, there's clearly a chance this mysterious flagship will see daylight by the end of 2025, joining all the aforementioned Edge 60 models (as well as their "vanilla" sibling) to create a very awkward and overly convoluted product lineup. If it feels like Motorola is doing too much in many European and Asian territories, releasing a new member of the Edge family practically every few weeks or so (not to mention the even more insane Moto G-series upgrade rhythm), the opposite is undeniably true in the US. Not only is there just one Motorola Edge (2025) model available stateside at the time of this writing, but that happens to be far from the most exciting smartphone released by the company this year. And it's not even that affordable, at least at the moment. Long story short, it's almost like Motorola's American branch is afraid of truly trying to compete with Apple and Samsung, nonetheless evidently still doing enough to win the regional bronze medal as far as shipments go.
The US-only Motorola Edge 2025 is a largely unremarkable mid-ranger. | Image Credit -- Motorola Hopefully, that's where the Edge 70 Ultra will come in, reviving the US Edge+ line (maybe under a different name) after an inexplicable break of (at least) two years. I don't have anything to base that hunch on, but a Motorola Edge Plus (2025) or Edge Ultra (2025) device with Snapdragon 8 Elite processing power has to happen, and it has to happen soon.
Of course, that still wouldn't make Motorola's messy product launch and branding strategy make a whole lot of sense, but it might just distract enough people from the illogical absence of the Edge 60 Ultra to give the company a little more time to put things in order.

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Samsung hasn't forgotten about the Galaxy A56 U.S. launch after all
Samsung hasn't forgotten about the Galaxy A56 U.S. launch after all

Phone Arena

timean hour ago

  • Phone Arena

Samsung hasn't forgotten about the Galaxy A56 U.S. launch after all

Samsung's Galaxy A56 is still missing from U.S. store shelves nearly three months after its global debut, but that might be about to change (finally). A new development suggests the company is still planning to bring the phone stateside, albeit on its own slow schedule. Samsung is still working on U.S. firmware for the Galaxy A56, confirming the delayed phone is on its way even without a set release date. | Image credit — PhoneArena As things stand, the more affordable Galaxy A36 is already available in the U.S., while the more capable Galaxy A56 remains out of reach. The delay is frustrating, especially considering Samsung confirmed back in March that the A56 would arrive stateside, just not immediately. Since then, the company hasn't said much — but behind the scenes, development hasn't can now confirm that Samsung is actively working on U.S. firmware for the Galaxy A56 , specifically model number SM-A566U1. That's the clearest sign yet that the device is still coming. While there's still no firm release date, continued firmware development suggests Samsung is inching closer to launch. One possible reason for the slow rollout is that the Galaxy A56 offers tremendous value for its price — so much so that it could compete with the upcoming Galaxy S24 FE. Priced at $499 globally, the A56 brings a 120Hz AMOLED display, the Exynos 1480 chip with AMD graphics, and five years of software support. In some ways, it threatens to undercut Samsung's FE series. The Galaxy A56 has a lot going for it: it has a 6.6-inch 1080p AMOLED display together with a 50 MP main camera and a 5,000 mAh battery. It also comes with four OS updates and five years of security patches. One of its strongest selling points, however, is the Exynos 1480 processor, which includes a stronger GPU with higher graphics performance than previous A5x phones. The expected U.S. launch price remains at $499 but Samsung might modify this amount. We will keep tracking the situation until Samsung makes an official announcement about the product. The Galaxy A56 remains in development but its arrival will happen after the expected time frame.

The tablet that makes the iPad Pro M4 look overpriced
The tablet that makes the iPad Pro M4 look overpriced

Phone Arena

time2 hours ago

  • Phone Arena

The tablet that makes the iPad Pro M4 look overpriced

If you've been eyeing the new iPad Pro M4 but flinched at the $1,300 price, there's another option that deserves serious attention. The tablet I am referring to doesn't come with Apple's logo or OLED marketing buzz, but it does come with a Snapdragon 8 Elite chip, a 13.2-inch high-resolution display, and the same kind of polish. This puts it well above most Android tablets. It is closer to the iPad Pro than you might expect. But the most mind-boggling part is that it starts at just $700 .This is not a tablet that asks you to settle. It asks a much better question: Are high-end tablets overpriced? The iPad Pro M4 is faster on paper, but in real-world use, the OnePlus Pad 3 delivers performance that feels just as fluid and capable for most tasks. | Image credit — PhoneArena If you are familiar with the tablet scene, and if you have been reading our recent news and reviews, you probably already know the tablet I am talking about — the OnePlus Tab start with the iPad Pro's biggest strength — its raw power. The iPad Pro M4 is the most powerful tablet on the market today, there's no doubt about it. It reached a 13,280 score in our Geekbench 6 multi-core tests, easily outpacing every Android rival, including the OnePlus Pad 3, which scored just below 9,000. But as usual, context matters. In day-to-day usage, you'd be hard-pressed to notice the difference. The Pad 3 delivers uncompromising performance—it stayed cool under stress and ran with the same fluidity we've come to expect from OnePlus phones. Unless you're routinely editing 4K video with multiple camera feeds, the Snapdragon 8 Elite delivers more performance than most users will ever the iPad Pro M4 has the unfortunate (and well-known) problem of underutilized power. iPadOS is still restrictive, although this might be changing with iPadOS 26 — more on that later. Apple's big display upgrade in 2024 was the move to Tandem OLED, and the iPad Pro M4's 13-inch Ultra Retina XDR panel is legitimately stunning. It hits up to 1,600 nits of HDR brightness and offers inky blacks that you could die for. But OnePlus has done an amazing job as Pad 3 features a sharp 13.2-inch LCD display with a crisp 3392 x 2400 resolution. Its 7:5 aspect ratio is more versatile than the iPad Pro's 4:3, giving you extra room for multitasking and video while still feeling comfortable for reading and vertical use. And even though it's not OLED, it is still sharp, vibrant, color-accurate, and plenty bright, peaking at 900 nits. You also get a 144Hz refresh rate, which is actually higher than Apple's ProMotion 120Hz. Let's talk longevity. The iPad Pro M4 13-inch lasted just 5 hours and 25 minutes on our custom battery score, with 10h and 54min of web browsing and 8h and 22min of video playback. Not bad, but not great either, especially considering Apple's usual 'all-day' promise. And with the M4 chip's higher performance ceiling, battery drain during intensive tasks can drop those numbers OnePlus Pad 3, on the other hand, reached a 15-hour result in our browsing test, demolishing the iPad and even besting most Android rivals. Video and gaming results were also pretty for the charging, OnePlus is unsurprisingly the winner thanks to its 80W charging, which was enough to charge the tablet 0-100% in just over 90 minutes. The iPad, on the other hand, takes two and a half hours, using a much slower 18W brick. One thing that truly stood out in our OnePlus Pad 3 review was its audio performance. Eight speakers — including four woofers and four tweeters — deliver booming sound with surprising bass depth. It's not just loud, the audio profile is immersive. So much so that watching movies or playing games without headphones feels oddly speakers are good — might even be the best, in fact — but the new Pro lost some bass due to its slimmer build. It's still detailed and clean, but for a device that costs $600 less, the Pad 3 comes dangerously close. OnePlus definitely knew what it was doing here. OnePlus Pad 3 accessories are cheaper than Apple's, but their lower build quality and input performance leave room for improvement. | Image credit — PhoneArena This is one area where OnePlus still feels a step behind. While the Pad 3's accessories are more affordable than Apple's — $200 vs $349 for the keyboard and $100 vs $129 for the stylus — they also fall short in terms of polish. The keyboard's trackpad has inconsistent pointer behavior, and the stylus still lags behind Apple's Pencil or Samsung's S Pen when it comes to responsiveness and palm rejection. For a tablet with such premium hardware, the input experience should said, it's a welcome gesture that OnePlus lets you choose a free OnePlus Pad 3 Folio Case or Stylo 2 if you order the tablet early. It softens the blow and gives new users a chance to get started without shelling out extra. But going forward, OnePlus needs to bring its accessories up to the same standard as the tablet itself. iPadOS is sleeker and more professional, but OxygenOS on the OnePlus Pad 3 offers greater freedom, flexibility, and fewer ecosystem constraints. | Image credit — PhoneArena I think the difference between iPadOS and OxygenOS is this: Apple offers a polished, consistent experience with carefully integrated features, while OnePlus has a more sandbox approach that gives you control and flexibility. iPadOS 26 introduces a sleek new interface, better external display support, and powerful tools like Stage Manager 2. And to Apple's credit, the tablet runs professional apps like Final Cut Pro and Photoshop, which blur the line between tablet and desktop computing. That said, iPadOS still enforces some frustrating limits. There's no open file system, app workflows can be fragile (as we saw in our iPad Pro M4 review, where minimizing an app mid-export caused a failure), and you're locked into Apple's tight ecosystem. By contrast, OxygenOS on the OnePlus Pad 3 may not be as refined, but it gives you more breathing room. You can install full Android apps without gatekeeping, work with files more freely, and use clever features like Open Canvas for multitasking. It even borrows a few tricks from Oppo's ecosystem for better integration with Macs and iPad Pro M4 is a technical masterpiece. But the OnePlus Pad 3 is a pragmatic, and a great bang for your buck solution. For about half the price, you get a tablet that trades blows with Apple's best on display quality, performance, and battery life. It offers better charging, similar audio, and arguably more flexibility for casual and power users you give up OLED, some ecosystem perks, and Apple's five-year software update promise, but what you get in return is value that feels almost disruptive. OnePlus didn't just build a great Android tablet . It gave us the best way to save on new iPad Pro.

The Apple Watch Ultra 2 is unusually affordable in brand-new condition for a limited time
The Apple Watch Ultra 2 is unusually affordable in brand-new condition for a limited time

Phone Arena

time2 hours ago

  • Phone Arena

The Apple Watch Ultra 2 is unusually affordable in brand-new condition for a limited time

Do you know that outstanding Apple Watch Ultra 2 Woot deal from just a couple of days ago? The Amazon-owned e-tailer is now running another sale on the same 2023-released rugged smartwatch, and some of you dear readers might find this one even more compelling than the previous offer, even though you have to spend a little more money today (and today only). That's because your $669.99 will buy you a brand-new, unused, unopened, and undamaged Apple Watch Ultra 2 unit this time around instead of a "grade A" refurb. The refurbished promotion is actually gone already, so I should probably stop talking about it and focus more on comparing this price with what Amazon itself is currently charging for a new Ultra 2 with a full 1-year manufacturer warranty included. $129 off (16%) GPS, Bluetooth, Cellular Connectivity, Always-On Retina Display with Up to 3000 Nits of Brightness, Apple S9 Processor, 1000m Water Resistance, Double Tap Gesture, ECG, Blood Oxygen Sensor, Sleep Apnea Detection, High and Low Heart Rate Notifications, Irregular Rhythm Alerts, Temperature Sensing, Fall Detection, Crash Detection, Siren, Up to 36 Hours of Battery Life, 49mm Titanium Case, Two Color Options, New, 1-Year Apple Warranty Included Buy at Woot GPS, Bluetooth, Cellular Connectivity, Always-On Retina Display with Up to 3000 Nits of Brightness, Apple S9 Processor, 1000m Water Resistance, Double Tap Gesture, ECG, Blood Oxygen Sensor, Sleep Apnea Detection, High and Low Heart Rate Notifications, Irregular Rhythm Alerts, Temperature Sensing, Fall Detection, Crash Detection, Siren, Up to 36 Hours of Battery Life, 49mm Titanium Case, Multiple Colors and Band Options Buy at Amazon That's around 70 bucks more than Woot, mind you, after a much humbler $60 discount from a $799 list price. Now, it's highly debatable if the Apple Watch Ultra 2 is worth eight whole Benjamins with a potentially vastly improved sequel likely right around the corner, but at $670, the value for your money is essentially unbeatable if you're an iPhone owner with a passion for the great outdoors. If you hurry, you can opt for a black titanium model with a matching black trail loop or a rugged titanium version with a blue ocean band at the exact same $669.99 price. The impressive new Woot deal is technically scheduled to go away at the end of the day as far as both those models are concerned, but due to their younger age and arguably classier look, the all-black units could well go out of stock even sooner. As such, I can't stress enough how important it is to pull the trigger as soon as possible... if you're sure this is the best smartwatch for you. The Apple Watch Series 10 is obviously still a lot more affordable, but it's also much less robust and nowhere near as well-equipped to handle an adventurous lifestyle. Oh, and did I mention the Apple Watch Ultra 2 comes with built-in cellular connectivity as standard too?

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store