Motorola’s new Razr Fold looked great when we didn’t know anything about it, but it just looks all the more attractive now. During a hands-on session at MWC 2026 this weekend, I was able to see more of the Razr Fold’s software suite, and it feels very much like it’s the perfect middle ground between the Google Pixel and Samsung Galaxy approaches to book-style foldables.
Samsung’s usual “everything and the kitchen sink” approach to software features works pretty well for foldables, with the Galaxy Fold series offering some excellent features that enhance multitasking and take advantage of the hardware. It comes at the expense of some overall clutter, but it works, and it’s one of many reasons a Galaxy Z Fold 7 remains my daily smartphone. Compare that to Google Pixel, where you get a super clean experience, but one that’s not quite as feature-packed.
Motorola, with the Razr Fold, has built out an experience that feels very clean yet quite feature-packed. It strikes a really good balance.
Like both Google and Samsung devices, the Razr Fold takes full advantage of Android’s tablet/foldable optimizations on that inner display. You get a taskbar (which can be visible at all times both with button and gesture navigation), as well as the ability to quickly drop apps into multitasking split-screen.
Beyond that, you can also pose the foldable at an angle to use “laptop mode,” which turns the bottom half of the folded display into a trackpad with a cursor on the top half. Samsung offers the same thing on Galaxy foldables.


Another nice tweak from Motorola is the ability to choose what the Recents menu, using either a 2-row grid similar to what Pixel has after the current app, or a 1-row list similar to Samsung’s current implementation.


Motorola is also including “desk display” when the device is in a tented mode, with that mode able to show your clock and calendar. This feels very reminescent of Motorola’s tent modes on the Razr series, but I’m not so sure I’d use it on a book-style device.


I was already excited about the Razr Fold, but it really seems like Motorola has nailed the software, which has me all the more hyped for this launch. Especially knowing that Motorola is promising 7 years of updates.
Needless to say, I’m looking forward to the full review on this one but, sadly, we still don’t have a firm release date.
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