Motorola Edge 70 Pro+ Review: A Balanced Phone
That Actually Means It
Most
phones at this price make you choose. Great camera, but no wireless charging.
Big battery, but chunky build. Fast processor, but mediocre display. Motorola
says the Edge 70 Pro+ is different. After spending time with it, I think they
have a point.
The Edge 70 Pro+ starts at around $540 (after offers). That is not cheap. But when you look at what you get, it is hard to find something close to it.
Design and Build: Slim, Tough, and Premium
Pick
it up and you notice two things. It feels solid, and it does not feel heavy. At
188 grams, it sits comfortably in your hand. The satin finish looks premium
without being slippery. You can get it in Maroon, Coffee, or Blue. All three
look good in person.
The
build quality is serious. Gorilla Glass 7i on the front. Military Standard 810H
rating for drops. IP68/69 water resistance. That last part is worth calling
out. IP69 means it can handle high-pressure water jets, not just accidental
splashes. That is rare at this price.
There is no case in the box, which is a bit annoying. But everything else is there including a 90W charger and USB-C cable.
Display: Probably the Best Screen You Will See
at This Price
The
6.8-inch AMOLED display has a 144Hz refresh rate, quad-curved edges, and nearly
zero bezels. Motorola claims a 96.7% screen-to-body ratio. That checks out.
Content fills the screen edge to edge.
The
peak brightness hits 5200 nits. That is an extreme number. Outdoor visibility
is excellent. Colors are accurate too because both the display and cameras
carry Pantone Validation. That means what you see is what is actually there.
There
is also a Smart Water Touch feature that lets the screen work normally even
with wet hands or in light rain. Sounds like a marketing line until you
actually need it.
HDR10+ support and SGS Eye Protection certification round it out. Long sessions on this screen feel comfortable.
Performance: Built for Heavy Use
The
MediaTek Dimensity 8500 Extreme handles daily work and gaming without breaking
a sweat. You get 12GB of LPDDR5x RAM and 256GB of UFS 4.1 storage. That
combination is fast. Apps open instantly. Multitasking is smooth.
For
gamers, this phone supports 120 FPS in BGMI and COD Mobile. The vapor cooling
chamber at 4600 square millimeters keeps the phone around 40 to 41 degrees
Celsius during long sessions. It does not throttle. It does not get hot. It
just runs.
AnTuTu scores land between 2.1 and 2.2 million. For reference, many flagship phones from big brands hover around similar numbers. This is not a compromise processor.
Software and AI: Useful, Not Gimmicky
The
phone ships with Hello UI on top of Android 16. Motorola promises 3 years of OS
updates and 5 years of security patches. That is solid long-term support.
The
AI integration is called Moto AI. Unlike most phone AI features that feel
bolted on, this one is woven into the OS. You can switch between Perplexity,
Copilot, or Gemini depending on what you need. Contextual Memory learns your
usage over time and gives smarter suggestions.
There
is also an AI image generator, a playlist editor, and security features under
the ThinkShield and Moto Secure umbrella. None of it feels like a checklist
feature. It actually works in daily use.
Connectivity is strong. Wi-Fi 6E, Bluetooth 5.4, and 17 5G bands. A few things are missing though. No SD card slot, no E-SIM support, and no IR blaster. Worth knowing before you buy.
Camera: A Triple 50MP Setup That Takes It
Seriously
Motorola
did something most brands skip at this price. All three rear cameras are 50MP.
Not one flagship sensor and two throwaway lenses. Three real cameras.
The
primary Sony sensor delivers excellent dynamic range and natural skin tones.
The 3.5x telephoto is great for zoomed portraits. Early units had slightly soft
telephoto images, but a software update fixes that. The ultra-wide doubles as a
macro lens because it has autofocus, which is a nice bonus.
The
50MP front camera handles selfies well. And the video specs are impressive. All
sensors can record 4K at 60FPS including macro mode. Most phones at twice the
price cannot do that.
Pantone Validation on the cameras means colors in your photos match real life. That matters if you photograph food, products, or anything where accuracy counts.
Battery and Charging: Hard to Beat
The
6500mAh battery is massive. In daily use, most people will not drain it in a
day even with heavy screen time. It supports 90W wired charging which fills it
up fast.
Here is the standout feature that most phones at this price skip. It also supports 15W wireless charging. A 6500mAh battery with wireless charging support in a slim body at this price is genuinely rare. That combination alone sets it apart from most competitors.
Final Verdict
The
Motorola Edge 70 Pro+ does what few phones do well. It keeps everything you
would want and skips the usual compromises.
You
get a stunning display, a proper triple camera system, massive battery with
wireless charging, strong performance, and a slim build. At around $540, it
sits in a price range where flagships start asking you to give something up.
The
missing SD card and E-SIM might bother some people. And the telephoto needs
that software update. But outside of those minor issues, this is one of the
most complete packages in its class.
If
you want a phone that does not cut corners, the Edge 70 Pro+ deserves serious
consideration.
#MotorolaEdge70ProPlus #MotorolaReview #AndroidPhone #BestPhone2025 #SmartphoneReview #TechReview #MidRangeKing #Gadgets365 #5GPhone #TripleCamera
Note: This review is based on independent testing. A
collaboration between the original video creator and Motorola was disclosed in
the source material.

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