Motorola Razr vs Galaxy Fold - Full comparison

there are two batteries one on either side of the folding hinge this helps balance the phone when you're holding it so one side isn't heavier than the other we've seen a phone that puts all the battery on one side and trust me it's a complete and total mess but what that means is that the battery capacity isn't as efficient so if you have a phone with just one big battery that's generally gonna last you longer than a phone with the same capacity split into two smaller cells the Galaxy fold already has the advantage because it's got 75% more battery capacity than the Motorola RAZR of course you have to take a lot of other things into consideration like the size of the screen that's going to be drawing down all of the battery reserves and also how fast the processor is the Galaxy fold has both a larger screen and a faster processor so imagine it's just spinning and spinning and spinning and it's using those reserves at a faster rate the Motorola RAZR has a comparatively smaller screen but it also has a more mid-range processor that's going to be using less power motorola promises that the razor is going to give you a full day of battery life but as always it's gonna depend what you're doing if you're streaming video if you're navigating all day if you are playing a game that is really resource demanding then you're gonna see that battery level drop faster and faster this is going to be something that we just have to

but with 75% more battery on the Galaxy fold I have a hard time thinking that the razor is going to keep up of the two devices the Galaxy fold is by far the most premium feeling it's covered in all that glass on the back as opposed to plastic on the back of the Motorola RAZR and that screams luxury you also have double the internal storage and RAM and you've got the ability to wire sleeve charge another device on the back of the galaxy fold in some countries it even supports 5 g and the motorola razr is 4G only for most people that's not going to be a problem but if you really want to be on the cutting edge then you might want to have that option I think that would come out in a future iteration

on the other hand the Motorola RAZR definitely gives the impression of being more durable and more of an everyday device with features that you will actually use especially if you don't often use wireless charging that plastic backing may not look as sleek but if you drop the phone on its back it's probably not gonna crack also motorola says that it is totally splash proof it hasn't been tested for water resistance but there's nano coating on both the outside and the inside of the device so while I would absolutely take it outside in the rain and not worry about it at all I would probably not try to purposely drop it in a bucket of water

then you've got the Galaxy fold which comes with a list of care instructions so long that I would be afraid to go outside in a sprinkle of course that's totally ok I tried it and the phone didn't melt the one thing that we haven't talked about yet and this is going to be the most important thing for most people is the price at $2,000 specifically 1980 dollars for the Galaxy fold that is insane and this positions it as a phone that most people are not going to buy unless they want to be on the absolute cutting edge and show off to everyone that they have this very unique device

$2,000 makes the razor's $1,500 price tag seem almost palatable and almost reasonable at this point let's actually take a step back and compare this $1,500 foldable flip phone which is essentially what it is with a $1000 premium device and remember that not too long ago $1000 was bananas for a phone like who would pay a grand for a phone well when you look at the two together let's say the iPhone 11 pro or the Samsung Galaxy Note 10.1 or storage way more cameras way more RAM and pretty much every other spec on that device compared to this simple one camera phone are you really willing to pay $1,500 for fewer specs and the ability to fold your phones maybe that isn't totally fair because we are comparing the Galaxy fold to the Motorola RAZR

and that question just comes down to portability or big screen plus all of the extras at this point all we can really do is compare the phone side-by-side plus my first impressions of the Motorola RAZR

"WEBVTTKind: captionsLanguage: enthe new motorola razr and the samsung galaxy fold are both foldable phones that is they have one large uninterrupted screen that bends and a half but when you compare them side-by-side they're actually very different the most obvious thing is the way that these phones fold the Motorola RAZR folds vertically from top to bottom which creates a short crease in the middle and the galaxies fold opens and closes like a book which creates a bigger crease going from top to bottom now the shape of these phones also changes how you use them you've got a tall narrow 6.2 inch screen on the razor you're really going to use that to scroll and you're gonna want to turn the phone into landscape mode when you watch video or look at photos you just don't really have that other option otherwise your image is going to be way to squat and small on the galaxy fold however it's much more square so you could watch videos in either mode of course it's going to be a little bit more comfortable to turn that phone on its side as well you also get a larger interior screen at 7.3 inches however at the Galaxy fold has this really weird notch that sticks out literally like a sore thumb and so that will kind of get in the way a little bit with some of what you do but it won't take up the action of the device on the razor the bezels are much more even all around it so even though you have actually less screen area to work with in some ways it feels like you have more usable screen the outer screens are different too you've got a 2.7 inch touch screen on the outside of the Motorola RAZR that you can access when that phone snaps shut and on the galaxy fold you've got a 4.6 inch screen on the outside that's also fully touched one difference though is that you can open up any single Android app on the outside of the galaxy fold when you open up the phone itself that app triggers and opens up on the interior display and that's just not so with the Motorola RAZR you can have a shortcut to certain apps for example messages or Gmail when you're responding to alerts but you're not really gonna sit there and type the screen is just too small to do that and you can't open up every single app the whole point of having a foldable phone is to double or even triple your screen real estate well creating a device that's small enough to put into your pocket so the real question is how easy is it to carry around with you the Motorola RAZR is kind of like a chunky square-ish it's it's a rectangle but it's not as oblong it's not tall and narrow as the galaxy folders I could fit it into all of my pockets with ease there's a little bit of a tighter squeeze on the front right pocket of my jeans but I would say for most people it's gonna be really easy just to carry around with you and that's what Motorola wants now the Galaxy fold on the other hand I think does actually close up into this tall narrow baton shape that I could very easily fit into my jacket pocket and of course I could put it in other pockets it maybe looked a little bit ridiculous if somebody was seeing this phone towering out of my back pocket but I didn't really have a problem carrying it around of course I use a person and so that's a lot easier but the point of that device isn't to be portable necessarily it's to give you a really big screen that you can get immersed into so it just depends on what you want do you want a large screen or do you want something you can carry with you because you miss small phones and you think today's phones are just too damn big when you're looking at both phones closed you'll notice that the Galaxy fold has an air gap that means the two sides that fold together don't sit flush one on top of the other but the Motorola RAZR does and that's because Motorola is using a proprietary hinge system that helps keep the two ends of the phone lying flush now both screens are made from plastic and plastic just doesn't Bend you know totally flat but motorola has created the sort of interior pocket that helps make this look like a normal phone and less like a beta product I think this is something that other foldable designs are going to want to mimic going forward but this is something that definitely gives the razor an edge even before it went on sale officially the Galaxy fold was in a little bit of trouble with its screen there were some issues that caused a major delay while Samsung redesigned the phone it was just too easy to cause damage that brings up questions about what the durability of the Motorola RAZR Stu splay will be there is a difference Motorola says between the two since 2011 Motorola has been working on shatter shield which is a technology that creates this hard code over the delicate plastic display underneath so Motorola is claiming that their phone is stronger this is something that we're going to have to test it will be very interesting to see how that pans out now it's time to talk about cameras because everybody cares about cameras I care about cameras and this is one of the biggest differences between the two phones the Motorola RAZR looks positively scant compared to the galaxy folds cameras you basically have to you've got a mean 16 megapixel camera on the outside of the phone this is what you use for selfies and also to take pictures of almost literally everything else there is also a five megapixel camera on the inside of the phone but you're not supposed to use that for taking selfies that's really just for video calls or even for starting a video call in an app and then closing the device and continuing the video call on the higher quality 16 megapixel camera on the outside other than that you've got a time-of-flight sensor but that's not really something that you're gonna use to take pictures with it's there to assist with low-light photography so in essence there's really one main camera there's no telephoto lens and there's no wide Aang let's moving over to the Galaxy fold there are six cameras there and maybe that's overkill but what it means is that there's a camera lens available to snap a shot no matter how you're holding the phone you can take selfies when it's open selfies when it's closed and there are three lenses on the back just like on the Galaxy Note 10 phones and the Galaxy S 10 it's got telephoto it's got wide-angle and I've come to really appreciate both those lenses of course the main camera quality is the most important but I really love the drama and the amount of people or landscape that you can put into that wide-angle lens and I would miss it if it weren't on a phone battery life is a big deal on any phone because if you're gonna invest money into a product especially if it's a premium foldable phone then you're gonna want it to last throughout the day both the Motorola RAZR and the Galaxy fold have split batteries that is there are two batteries one on either side of the folding hinge this helps balance the phone when you're holding it so one side isn't heavier than the other we've seen a phone that puts all the battery on one side and trust me it's a complete and total mess but what that means is that the battery capacity isn't as efficient so if you have a phone with just one big battery that's generally gonna last you longer than a phone with the same capacity split into two smaller cells the Galaxy fold already has the advantage because it's got 75% more battery capacity than the Motorola RAZR of course you have to take a lot of other things into consideration like the size of the screen that's going to be drawing down all of the battery reserves and also how fast the processor is the Galaxy fold has both a larger screen and a faster processor so imagine it's just spinning and spinning and spinning and it's using those reserves at a faster rate the Motorola RAZR has a comparatively smaller screen but it also has a more mid-range processor that's going to be using less power motorola promises that the razor is going to give you a full day of battery life but as always it's gonna depend what you're doing if you're streaming video if you're navigating all day if you are playing a game that is really resource demanding then you're gonna see that battery level drop faster and faster this is going to be something that we just have to but with 75% more battery on the Galaxy fold I have a hard time thinking that the razor is going to keep up of the two devices the Galaxy fold is by far the most premium feeling it's covered in all that glass on the back as opposed to plastic on the back of the Motorola RAZR and that screams luxury you also have double the internal storage and RAM and you've got the ability to wire sleeve charge another device on the back of the galaxy fold in some countries it even supports 5 g and the motorola razr is 4G only for most people that's not going to be a problem but if you really want to be on the cutting edge then you might want to have that option I think that would come out in a future iteration on the other hand the Motorola RAZR definitely gives the impression of being more durable and more of an everyday device with features that you will actually use especially if you don't often use wireless charging that plastic backing may not look as sleek but if you drop the phone on its back it's probably not gonna crack also motorola says that it is totally splash proof it hasn't been tested for water resistance but there's nano coating on both the outside and the inside of the device so while I would absolutely take it outside in the rain and not worry about it at all I would probably not try to purposely drop it in a bucket of water then you've got the Galaxy fold which comes with a list of care instructions so long that I would be afraid to go outside in a sprinkle of course that's totally ok I tried it and the phone didn't melt the one thing that we haven't talked about yet and this is going to be the most important thing for most people is the price at $2,000 specifically 1980 dollars for the Galaxy fold that is insane and this positions it as a phone that most people are not going to buy unless they want to be on the absolute cutting edge and show off to everyone that they have this very unique device $2,000 makes the razor's $1,500 price tag seem almost palatable and almost reasonable at this point let's actually take a step back and compare this $1,500 foldable flip phone which is essentially what it is with a $1000 premium device and remember that not too long ago $1000 was bananas for a phone like who would pay a grand for a phone well when you look at the two together let's say the iPhone 11 pro or the Samsung Galaxy Note 10.1 or storage way more cameras way more RAM and pretty much every other spec on that device compared to this simple one camera phone are you really willing to pay $1,500 for fewer specs and the ability to fold your phones maybe that isn't totally fair because we are comparing the Galaxy fold to the Motorola RAZR and that question just comes down to portability or big screen plus all of the extras at this point all we can really do is compare the phone side-by-side plus my first impressions of the Motorola RAZR but I already know what I think I want to hear what you think leave your comments below and don't forget to check out my first look at the Motorola RAZRthe new motorola razr and the samsung galaxy fold are both foldable phones that is they have one large uninterrupted screen that bends and a half but when you compare them side-by-side they're actually very different the most obvious thing is the way that these phones fold the Motorola RAZR folds vertically from top to bottom which creates a short crease in the middle and the galaxies fold opens and closes like a book which creates a bigger crease going from top to bottom now the shape of these phones also changes how you use them you've got a tall narrow 6.2 inch screen on the razor you're really going to use that to scroll and you're gonna want to turn the phone into landscape mode when you watch video or look at photos you just don't really have that other option otherwise your image is going to be way to squat and small on the galaxy fold however it's much more square so you could watch videos in either mode of course it's going to be a little bit more comfortable to turn that phone on its side as well you also get a larger interior screen at 7.3 inches however at the Galaxy fold has this really weird notch that sticks out literally like a sore thumb and so that will kind of get in the way a little bit with some of what you do but it won't take up the action of the device on the razor the bezels are much more even all around it so even though you have actually less screen area to work with in some ways it feels like you have more usable screen the outer screens are different too you've got a 2.7 inch touch screen on the outside of the Motorola RAZR that you can access when that phone snaps shut and on the galaxy fold you've got a 4.6 inch screen on the outside that's also fully touched one difference though is that you can open up any single Android app on the outside of the galaxy fold when you open up the phone itself that app triggers and opens up on the interior display and that's just not so with the Motorola RAZR you can have a shortcut to certain apps for example messages or Gmail when you're responding to alerts but you're not really gonna sit there and type the screen is just too small to do that and you can't open up every single app the whole point of having a foldable phone is to double or even triple your screen real estate well creating a device that's small enough to put into your pocket so the real question is how easy is it to carry around with you the Motorola RAZR is kind of like a chunky square-ish it's it's a rectangle but it's not as oblong it's not tall and narrow as the galaxy folders I could fit it into all of my pockets with ease there's a little bit of a tighter squeeze on the front right pocket of my jeans but I would say for most people it's gonna be really easy just to carry around with you and that's what Motorola wants now the Galaxy fold on the other hand I think does actually close up into this tall narrow baton shape that I could very easily fit into my jacket pocket and of course I could put it in other pockets it maybe looked a little bit ridiculous if somebody was seeing this phone towering out of my back pocket but I didn't really have a problem carrying it around of course I use a person and so that's a lot easier but the point of that device isn't to be portable necessarily it's to give you a really big screen that you can get immersed into so it just depends on what you want do you want a large screen or do you want something you can carry with you because you miss small phones and you think today's phones are just too damn big when you're looking at both phones closed you'll notice that the Galaxy fold has an air gap that means the two sides that fold together don't sit flush one on top of the other but the Motorola RAZR does and that's because Motorola is using a proprietary hinge system that helps keep the two ends of the phone lying flush now both screens are made from plastic and plastic just doesn't Bend you know totally flat but motorola has created the sort of interior pocket that helps make this look like a normal phone and less like a beta product I think this is something that other foldable designs are going to want to mimic going forward but this is something that definitely gives the razor an edge even before it went on sale officially the Galaxy fold was in a little bit of trouble with its screen there were some issues that caused a major delay while Samsung redesigned the phone it was just too easy to cause damage that brings up questions about what the durability of the Motorola RAZR Stu splay will be there is a difference Motorola says between the two since 2011 Motorola has been working on shatter shield which is a technology that creates this hard code over the delicate plastic display underneath so Motorola is claiming that their phone is stronger this is something that we're going to have to test it will be very interesting to see how that pans out now it's time to talk about cameras because everybody cares about cameras I care about cameras and this is one of the biggest differences between the two phones the Motorola RAZR looks positively scant compared to the galaxy folds cameras you basically have to you've got a mean 16 megapixel camera on the outside of the phone this is what you use for selfies and also to take pictures of almost literally everything else there is also a five megapixel camera on the inside of the phone but you're not supposed to use that for taking selfies that's really just for video calls or even for starting a video call in an app and then closing the device and continuing the video call on the higher quality 16 megapixel camera on the outside other than that you've got a time-of-flight sensor but that's not really something that you're gonna use to take pictures with it's there to assist with low-light photography so in essence there's really one main camera there's no telephoto lens and there's no wide Aang let's moving over to the Galaxy fold there are six cameras there and maybe that's overkill but what it means is that there's a camera lens available to snap a shot no matter how you're holding the phone you can take selfies when it's open selfies when it's closed and there are three lenses on the back just like on the Galaxy Note 10 phones and the Galaxy S 10 it's got telephoto it's got wide-angle and I've come to really appreciate both those lenses of course the main camera quality is the most important but I really love the drama and the amount of people or landscape that you can put into that wide-angle lens and I would miss it if it weren't on a phone battery life is a big deal on any phone because if you're gonna invest money into a product especially if it's a premium foldable phone then you're gonna want it to last throughout the day both the Motorola RAZR and the Galaxy fold have split batteries that is there are two batteries one on either side of the folding hinge this helps balance the phone when you're holding it so one side isn't heavier than the other we've seen a phone that puts all the battery on one side and trust me it's a complete and total mess but what that means is that the battery capacity isn't as efficient so if you have a phone with just one big battery that's generally gonna last you longer than a phone with the same capacity split into two smaller cells the Galaxy fold already has the advantage because it's got 75% more battery capacity than the Motorola RAZR of course you have to take a lot of other things into consideration like the size of the screen that's going to be drawing down all of the battery reserves and also how fast the processor is the Galaxy fold has both a larger screen and a faster processor so imagine it's just spinning and spinning and spinning and it's using those reserves at a faster rate the Motorola RAZR has a comparatively smaller screen but it also has a more mid-range processor that's going to be using less power motorola promises that the razor is going to give you a full day of battery life but as always it's gonna depend what you're doing if you're streaming video if you're navigating all day if you are playing a game that is really resource demanding then you're gonna see that battery level drop faster and faster this is going to be something that we just have to but with 75% more battery on the Galaxy fold I have a hard time thinking that the razor is going to keep up of the two devices the Galaxy fold is by far the most premium feeling it's covered in all that glass on the back as opposed to plastic on the back of the Motorola RAZR and that screams luxury you also have double the internal storage and RAM and you've got the ability to wire sleeve charge another device on the back of the galaxy fold in some countries it even supports 5 g and the motorola razr is 4G only for most people that's not going to be a problem but if you really want to be on the cutting edge then you might want to have that option I think that would come out in a future iteration on the other hand the Motorola RAZR definitely gives the impression of being more durable and more of an everyday device with features that you will actually use especially if you don't often use wireless charging that plastic backing may not look as sleek but if you drop the phone on its back it's probably not gonna crack also motorola says that it is totally splash proof it hasn't been tested for water resistance but there's nano coating on both the outside and the inside of the device so while I would absolutely take it outside in the rain and not worry about it at all I would probably not try to purposely drop it in a bucket of water then you've got the Galaxy fold which comes with a list of care instructions so long that I would be afraid to go outside in a sprinkle of course that's totally ok I tried it and the phone didn't melt the one thing that we haven't talked about yet and this is going to be the most important thing for most people is the price at $2,000 specifically 1980 dollars for the Galaxy fold that is insane and this positions it as a phone that most people are not going to buy unless they want to be on the absolute cutting edge and show off to everyone that they have this very unique device $2,000 makes the razor's $1,500 price tag seem almost palatable and almost reasonable at this point let's actually take a step back and compare this $1,500 foldable flip phone which is essentially what it is with a $1000 premium device and remember that not too long ago $1000 was bananas for a phone like who would pay a grand for a phone well when you look at the two together let's say the iPhone 11 pro or the Samsung Galaxy Note 10.1 or storage way more cameras way more RAM and pretty much every other spec on that device compared to this simple one camera phone are you really willing to pay $1,500 for fewer specs and the ability to fold your phones maybe that isn't totally fair because we are comparing the Galaxy fold to the Motorola RAZR and that question just comes down to portability or big screen plus all of the extras at this point all we can really do is compare the phone side-by-side plus my first impressions of the Motorola RAZR but I already know what I think I want to hear what you think leave your comments below and don't forget to check out my first look at the Motorola RAZR\n"