Motorola Razr 60 Ultra: Folding the Past into the Future
Actually, the folded device is gone, and it is already strange that it might become one of the most incredible chapters in smartphone history. Also, the company Motorola, which is with the innovative Razr 60 Ultra and its siblings, is not only crossing the times but making a very interesting combination of past and present by combining the tradition of an old flipping way and the latest technology, thus reaffirming the idea of two opposite things that are not antagonistic but rather complementary.

Style Meets Substance
Motorola’s collaboration with Pantone isn’t a matter of tacking on fashionable hues to a phone—it’s about integrating design into the user experience. The Razr 60 Ultra is offered in high-end finishes from soft vegan leather to wood grain textures and suede-like Alcantara. Colors like Gibraltar Sea, Spring Bud, Lightest Sky, and Parfait Pink establish the tone for the base models, while the Ultra receives more elite looks like Scarab (olive suede), Mountain Trail (wood grain), and Rio Red (leather-like). Underneath the looks is durability: an aluminum chassis, titanium-strengthened hinge, and Gorilla Glass Victus—or ceramic in the Ultra—bestow a solid feel that’s reassuringly robust.
Displays That Steal the Show
Unfolded, the Razr 60 Ultra boasts a 7-inch OLED screen with razor-thin 2992 x 1224 resolution and an ultra-smooth 165Hz refresh rate. The base Razr is still impressive with a 6.9-inch screen at 120Hz. Both reach eye-popping levels of brightness, but the Ultra’s 4,500 nits peak makes it one of the brightest screens available, readily visible in full sun.
The Razr personality is still visible from the outside on the cover display. The 4-inch, almost bezel-free screen of the Ultra wraps around the two cameras, changing the front into a convenient mini-dashboard. The 3.6-inch cover display of the regular Razr is a bit smaller, but it is still large enough for quick exchanges with the phone closed.
Power Under the Hood
Performance is the main reason why the Ultra is called a “flagship”. It basically carries Qualcomm’s Snapdragon 8 Elite as a processor, along with the memory of up to 16GB and the storage of up to 1TB, and with that, it can do anything from demanding apps to games without any problem. The results of the benchmark tests show it is almost three times faster than the regular Razr, which relies on the MediaTek Dimensity 7400X. The base model is more than sufficient for everyday tasks, but the Ultra is designed for those who demand maximum speed and multitasking power.
On the phone, people can only use AI-editing apps, such as Google’s Magic Eraser and Photo Unblur, which let them refine the pictures in no time. Motorola’s Moto AI delivers smart features such as text summarization, content-aware search, and image generation, which is basically the result of the work of Microsoft, Google, and other AI engines putting their heads together.
Battery Life That Keeps Pace
Foldables have a bad rep for poor battery life, but Motorola is pushing back. The Razr 60 Ultra has a 4,700mAh battery, while the standard Razr packs a slightly smaller 4,500mAh silicon-carbon cell—both bigger than some competitors. Charging is rapid, too: the Ultra charges via 68W wired and 30W wireless charging, reaching 80% in some 30 minutes. The standard Razr handles 30W wired and 15W wireless speeds.
Software Smarts
Both phones ship out of the box running Android 15 with Motorola’s Hello UI overlaid on top. The look and feel is nearly stock Android but with truly useful additions, such as the Moto AI assistant. Remember This, Pay Attention, and Catch Me Up make the phone a productivity companion, making it easy to capture, transcribe, and summarize information at your fingertips. Three significant OS updates and a fourth year of security patching are what Motorola guarantees.
A Top Contender in the Foldable Market
The Razr 60 Ultra can be compared directly with Samsung’s Galaxy Z Flip series and Xiaomi’s Mix Flip line. Being certified IP48 for dust and water resistance and having a hinge with titanium reinforcement, it is still more fragile than a regular slab phone, but it is a safe and cool choice for daily use. Those who used to get pleasure from the physical click of closing the phone would be delighted. Still, to the rest of the crowd, it’s just another fashionable way out of the typical high-end market that is visually stunning and conceptually advanced.
Price and Positioning
Motorola is aiming at various consumers with its foldables: the Razr 2025 begins at $699.99, the Razr+ at $999.99, and the Ultra at $1,299.99 (with the 1TB Ultra now priced similarly to the base). The Ultra is for consumers who are willing to spend the most on a Motorola foldable; the regular model is more basic and budget-friendly.
The Razr 60 Ultra is more than a retro comeback—it’s a declaration that foldables are potent, useful, and enjoyable all at the same time. Motorola isn’t only following the foldable curve; it’s forging it.