Motorola Razr Fold vs Sony Xperia 1 VI | TechTalkTown
Motorola Razr Fold vs Sony Xperia 1 VI
Motorola Razr Fold
Motorola
8.3
Best US book foldable, big battery
Sony Xperia 1 VI
Sony
7.8
Creator flagship, niche, short support
Motorola Razr Fold
What Reviewers Agree On
Best battery life of any notebook-style foldable — roughly 14h31m (16h10m optimized), far ahead of the Galaxy Z Fold 7's ~10h44m
DxOMark's #1 foldable camera (≈164 points, ~8th overall), with a triple 50MP system Motorola made a genuine strength
Standout software — multitasking, laptop mode and a Pixel-meets-Samsung balance reviewers repeatedly praise
Excellent, very bright displays — an 8.1-inch ~6,200-nit inner panel and a 165Hz ~6,000-nit outer screen
Active stylus support (Moto Pen Ultra) that works even on the cover screen, a Z Fold limitation
Pros & Cons
Motorola Razr Fold
Pros
Best battery life of any notebook-style foldable — roughly 14h31m (16h10m optimized), far ahead of the Galaxy Z Fold 7's ~10h44m
DxOMark's #1 foldable camera (≈164 points, ~8th overall), with a triple 50MP system Motorola made a genuine strength
Standout software — multitasking, laptop mode and a Pixel-meets-Samsung balance reviewers repeatedly praise
Excellent, very bright displays — an 8.1-inch ~6,200-nit inner panel and a 165Hz ~6,000-nit outer screen
Active stylus support (Moto Pen Ultra) that works even on the cover screen, a Z Fold limitation
Detailed Comparison
Design & Build
Motorola Razr Fold
Motorola's first book-style foldable trades the iconic flip for a Samsung-like book form, with a Material Expressive look, a flat-folding hinge and a notably heavy body.
Motorola's first book-style folding phone is a premium option, not the budget-friendlier alternative the category could use, with a 6,000mAh battery, top-tier chipset and serious camera hardware.
At 243g it's about 28g heavier than the Galaxy Z Fold 7, largely because of the camera array, though it feels balanced and not heavy in the hand.
The design is Google Material Expressive instead of a misguided attempt to match Apple.
Motorola leveraged decades of hinge engineering to pull the screen taut, resulting in a surface that is startlingly flat and masks the crease.
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Undercuts the Galaxy Z Fold 7 by about $100 ($1,899 / £1,799) and includes a case plus a 90W charger in the box
Best book foldable you can actually buy in the US, since the Oppo Find N6 and Honor Magic V6 aren't sold there
Deal Breakers
Uses the non-Elite Snapdragon 8 Gen 5 in a $1,899 flagship — a clear cost-down some reviewers find disappointing
Heavy at 243g (≈28g more than the Galaxy Z Fold 7) and only IP48/IP49 rated, not full IP68
Motorola's poor track record for timely updates, plus a genuine source conflict over whether it gets 7 years or only 3 years of OS updates
Foldable repair costs and Motorola's screen-peeling warranty history are recurring trust concerns
Sony Xperia 1 VI
What Reviewers Agree On
Battery life is class-leading — the FHD+ LTPO OLED plus Snapdragon 8 Gen 3 turns the 5,000mAh cell into a genuine two-day phone, with ~17h+ screen-on time in standardized tests.
The continuous-zoom telephoto (3.5x–7.1x / 85–170mm with no lens-jumping) is a genuinely unique camera feature no rival offers.
Sony retains enthusiast features rivals abandoned — a 3.5mm headphone jack, microSD expansion, tool-less SIM tray, side fingerprint and a dedicated shutter button.
Stereo speakers are among the best on any phone, and Snapdragon 8 Gen 3 performance stays snappy with minimal heat.
The move from the signature 4K screen to a regular FHD+ panel is the defining change — net-positive for battery and brightness.
Deal Breakers
Software-update support is short — Sony trails the 7 years now offered by Samsung, Google and even Nothing.
It's expensive and increasingly niche, with declining sales even in Sony's home market.
The telephoto and macro are only strong in great light, and night shots are often grainy with handheld motion blur.
The very tall 21:9 aspect ratio is polarising and a dealbreaker for some buyers.
Undercuts the Galaxy Z Fold 7 by about $100 ($1,899 / £1,799) and includes a case plus a 90W charger in the box
Best book foldable you can actually buy in the US, since the Oppo Find N6 and Honor Magic V6 aren't sold there
Cons
Uses the non-Elite Snapdragon 8 Gen 5 in a $1,899 flagship — a clear cost-down some reviewers find disappointing
Heavy at 243g (≈28g more than the Galaxy Z Fold 7) and only IP48/IP49 rated, not full IP68
Motorola's poor track record for timely updates, plus a genuine source conflict over whether it gets 7 years or only 3 years of OS updates
Foldable repair costs and Motorola's screen-peeling warranty history are recurring trust concerns
Sony Xperia 1 VI
Pros
Battery life is class-leading — the FHD+ LTPO OLED plus Snapdragon 8 Gen 3 turns the 5,000mAh cell into a genuine two-day phone, with ~17h+ screen-on time in standardized tests.
The continuous-zoom telephoto (3.5x–7.1x / 85–170mm with no lens-jumping) is a genuinely unique camera feature no rival offers.
Sony retains enthusiast features rivals abandoned — a 3.5mm headphone jack, microSD expansion, tool-less SIM tray, side fingerprint and a dedicated shutter button.
Stereo speakers are among the best on any phone, and Snapdragon 8 Gen 3 performance stays snappy with minimal heat.
The move from the signature 4K screen to a regular FHD+ panel is the defining change — net-positive for battery and brightness.
Cons
Software-update support is short — Sony trails the 7 years now offered by Samsung, Google and even Nothing.
It's expensive and increasingly niche, with declining sales even in Sony's home market.
The telephoto and macro are only strong in great light, and night shots are often grainy with handheld motion blur.
The very tall 21:9 aspect ratio is polarising and a dealbreaker for some buyers.
The build feels relatively sturdy with a zero-gap hinge and flush closure, though the soft inner screen still makes dust and dirt a concern.
Sony Xperia 1 VI
A grippy, skinny, lightweight 21:9 slab with Gorilla Glass Victus 2, slightly thicker top/bottom bezels (no notch/punch-hole) and Sony's signature enthusiast hardware. The tall aspect ratio divides opinion.
A grippy, skinny, lightweight body that 'anyone can appreciate' — wrapped around flagship internals.
Retains a 3.5mm jack, a tool-less SIM tray you can remove without an ejector, and a physical fingerprint sensor built into the power button.
The bezels avoid a distracting selfie punch-hole — a deliberate choice gamers and streamers will appreciate.
The very tall 21:9 aspect ratio is a sticking point — 'the super weird tall aspect ratio kills it for me'.
Cameras
Motorola Razr Fold
Historically the foldable Achilles heel — but Motorola invested in hardware and software here, and DxOMark ranks it the best camera in any foldable.
DxOMark rates the Razr Fold the #1 camera among foldables — roughly 8th overall across all phones — with a Gold Label.
A 50MP main (f/1.6, OIS), a 50MP ultrawide (12mm, 122° FOV, f/2.0) and a third 50MP camera — all selfies can use the best 50MP main.
This is without question the best Motorola camera I've ever used.
Comes up just short of modern flagships like the iPhone 17 Pro, Find X9 Pro and Xiaomi 17 Ultra, with a DxOMark score of 164 points.
Took it for a street-photography spin and came away genuinely impressed — the camera hardware was what caught attention.
Highest-quality camera in a folding phone in the US — better than the Pixel 10 Pro Fold and Galaxy Z Fold 7, which use older sensors.
Sony Xperia 1 VI
A triple system — 48MP main, a unique continuous 85–170mm zoom telephoto with 120mm telemacro, and a 12MP ultrawide. Strong in good light with Sony's no-over-processing look and pro controls; weaker at night and for macro.
48MP f/1.9 24mm main (1/1.35"), a 12MP telephoto with stepless 3.5x–7.1x (85–170mm) optical zoom and 4cm telemacro at 120mm, plus a 12MP 16mm ultrawide.
The longer zoom reach is the highlight — stepless 3.5x (85mm) to 7.1x (170mm), up from 3.5x–5.2x on the Xperia 1 V; telephoto photos are excellent in good light with great dynamic range and accurate colors.
Sony's lack of the extreme processing you'd find on Pixel or Samsung — combined with a now-capable easy automatic mode — produces brilliant, natural results without forcing manual mode.
Notebookcheck rated it one of the two best camera smartphones (alongside the OnePlus 13) for travel photography.
Night photography is a weak point — cameras struggle to focus, results are often grainy or noisy, and Sony's algorithms don't fully kill handheld motion blur.
Performance
Motorola Razr Fold
Snapdragon 8 Gen 5 with 16GB RAM — fast for everyday use and surprisingly good in long sessions, but the choice of the non-Elite chip in a $1,899 phone is the headline criticism.
Motorola stuck Qualcomm's excellent Snapdragon 8 Gen 5 (16GB RAM, 512GB) inside its first full-fold flagship.
With a phone this expensive it is a bit disappointing Motorola couldn't go all the way with the Elite chip.
In a 20-minute stress test the Z Fold 7's 8 Elite was ~10% better on the first loop, but the Razr Fold ran better through the 20 minutes and ended ~20% ahead on sustained performance with similar thermals.
Recording 4K120 for a long time makes the Snapdragon CPU run quite hot, though it cools down fairly fast.
The non-Elite chip, 243g weight and IP49 dust rating could be causes for concern, even if the experience is smooth.
Sony Xperia 1 VI
Snapdragon 8 Gen 3 with 12GB RAM delivers flagship performance that stays snappy, and — unusually for older Xperias — the VI runs cool rather than hot under load.
Flagship performance — Snapdragon 8 Gen 3 with 12GB RAM and microSD expansion up to 2TB.
Unlike the notoriously hot Mark III/V, the Xperia 1 VI 'doesn't really feel like it's getting toasty at all' under sustained use.
Handles even the highest-quality games without struggle unless pushed beyond 15–20 minutes of continuous play.
Battery & Charging
Motorola Razr Fold
The standout: the largest battery in the book-foldable space delivering class-leading endurance, plus 80W wired charging — three times faster than the Galaxy Z Fold 7.
Lasting an impressive 14 hours 31 minutes, the Razr Fold is officially the best notebook-style foldable for battery life (16h10m with refresh-rate optimized).
The Galaxy Z Fold 7 managed only 10h44m in the same test, with a 4,400mAh battery versus the Razr Fold's 6,000mAh cell.
I found the battery basically impossible to kill in a single day, even with the Fold's hotspot supplying an entire office internet connection over 12 days.
It charges at 80W wired — over three times as fast as the Galaxy Z Fold 7's 25W — plus 50W wireless and 5W reverse, with a 90W charger and a case included in the box.
The 6,000mAh cell is colossal — about 20% larger than the Pixel 10 Pro Fold's — though there's also more display to power.
If you use the camera a lot or run games, the battery does drain quite quickly and you may need an afternoon top-up.
Sony Xperia 1 VI
The standout: the same 5,000mAh cell now lasts dramatically longer thanks to the FHD+ panel — most reviewers reach two days, some a third. Charging is modest at 30W (~80–90 min to full).
Advertised as a two-day battery despite 5,000mAh — on light use it stretched to the end of a third day, only needing a charge on morning four.
~17h20m of PCMark screen-on time, typically rounding into the night with ~30% left — very good going.
30W wired gives a full charge in ~80 minutes and ~50–54% in half an hour; an 80% charge limit is available to protect long-term battery health.
GSMArena: a 30-minute charge replenished 50% and a full 0% charge took around 90 minutes — Sony shaved a few minutes off the Xperia 1 V despite unchanged hardware.
Dissenting datapoint: one reviewer couldn't reach a second day even with light usage — real-world endurance varies with workload.
Value vs Competition
Motorola Razr Fold
At $1,899 it undercuts the Z Fold 7 and is the only premium book foldable many US buyers can actually purchase — value hinges on whether the non-Elite chip and update questions matter to you.
At $1,899.99 / £1,799.99 it undercuts the Galaxy Z Fold 7 by about $100/£100, and the pre-order Moto Pen Ultra bundle adds real value — the sum of its parts is the best foldable on the market.
If you're tired of Samsung-only or have no interest in the Pixel Fold, this may be the best folding phone you can get in the US right now — the Oppo Find N6 and Honor Magic V6 aren't available there.
It could be called a disappointment, especially compared to the Samsung Galaxy Z Fold and Honor Magic V5 — it should have offered something more compelling to stand out.
If Motorola drops the price by even two or three hundred dollars within the first few weeks, this phone suddenly becomes a much stronger contender.
It competes fairly well with the Oppo Find N6, which is amazing to see.
Sony Xperia 1 VI
A pricey, niche flagship that finally made a small splash for the Xperia line. Its value case rests on being the only true creator/enthusiast phone left — not on out-spec'ing mainstream rivals.
The Xperia series didn't make much of a mainstream splash until the Xperia 1 VI — a turning point for the line.
It's a creator-first phone with features you just don't see on rival flagships anymore — expandable storage and a headphone port — justifying its niche appeal.
Sony's declining sales even in its home country leave reviewers torn between gratitude for the variety and concern about the line's future.
For day-to-day use the Mark 6 is the better phone; the Mark 5 remains the pick specifically for video content creation.