Motorola Edge 40 (Borderless 6.55" pOLED 144 Hz display, 50MP camera, 68W TurboPower charging, Dolby Atmos® audio, Android 13, 8/128 or 8/256GB, MediaTek Dimensity 8020, dual SIM), Jet Black

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Motorola Edge 40 (Borderless 6.55" pOLED 144 Hz display, 50MP camera, 68W TurboPower charging, Dolby Atmos® audio, Android 13, 8/128 or 8/256GB, MediaTek Dimensity 8020, dual SIM), Jet Black

Motorola Edge 40 (Borderless 6.55" pOLED 144 Hz display, 50MP camera, 68W TurboPower charging, Dolby Atmos® audio, Android 13, 8/128 or 8/256GB, MediaTek Dimensity 8020, dual SIM), Jet Black

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Description

Premium 6.55-inch display While slightly smaller than some competitors, the pOLED display boasts key specs including HDR10+ certification and a rapid 144Hz refresh rate. However, it’s the camera offering, and the new main 50MP snapper in particular, that stands out among much of the mid-range competition. Rivalled only by the Pixel 7a in my mind, the 50MP snapper delivers plenty of detail, great dynamic range and vivid colours, and it’s equally as capable in low-light conditions thanks to its impressively wide f/1.4 aperture. Octa core (3.2 GHz, Single core, Cortex X2 + 2.75 GHz, Tri core, Cortex A710 + 2 GHz, Quad core, Cortex A510)

Motorola Edge 40 review: Style and substance | Trusted Reviews

Other than integrating it into my daily life as my main phone over the testing period, I also ran benchmarking apps to compare the Edge 40’s performance to other top Android phones. This included Geekbench 6, in which the Edge 40 landed an average single-core score of 1109 and an average multi-core score of 3578, as well as GFX bench. Camera is normal and multimedia experience is excellent no doubt speaker quality haptic also good 🔥🔥🔥 Wild Life Extreme Unlimited | Wild Life Extreme | Wild Life Unlimited Score | Wild Life Score | 2560x1440 Sling Shot Extreme (Vulkan) Unlimited Physics | 2560x1440 Sling Shot Extreme (Vulkan) Unlimited Graphics | 2560x1440 Sling Shot Extreme (Vulkan) Unlimited | 2560x1440 Sling Shot Extreme (ES 3.1) Unlimited Physics | 2560x1440 Sling Shot Extreme (ES 3.1) Unlimited Graphics | 2560x1440 Sling Shot Extreme (ES 3.1) Unlimited The 50 MP main camera uses the OmniVision OV50A as the image sensor and takes 12 MP shots via 4-in-1 pixel binning. Thanks to its large aperture of f/2.4 and the optical image stabilizer, it takes surprisingly good and low-noise shots in low residual light. Daytime photos are also convincing with natural colors and a lot of detail, even in dark areas of the image. When making calls, the smartphone transmits our voice quite clearly and understandably to our conversation partner, even in hands-free mode. VoLTE and WiFi calling are supported.

While the Motorola Edge 40 Pro is powered by Qualcomm’s latest and most powerful Snapdragon 8 Gen 2 processor, the Motorola Edge 40 gets the MediaTek Dimensity 8020 instead: a new mid-level processor that would compete with a top-end Snapdragon processor of a year or two ago. So it’s not the most powerful chip, but then this isn’t Motorola’s top-end handset – if you want more oomph you’ll need to step up to the Edge 40 Pro.

Motorola Edge 40 5G (256 GB Storage, 6.55-inch Display) Motorola Edge 40 5G (256 GB Storage, 6.55-inch Display)

As for my personal experience of reviewing phones, I've been writing about and reviewing mobile technology since 2014. Prior to joining TechRadar, I worked at Digital Trends in the mobile section, and before that I was at Android Central, writing about Android phones on a daily basis. This is my first Moto phone. I have been using Mi or Redmi series phone since long time and dabbled in Samsung M series once whic was very horrible experience. Bands : FDD N1 / N2 / N3 / N5 / N7 / N8 / N20 / N28, TDD N38 / N40 / N41 / N66 / N77 / N78, 4G Bands : TD-LTE 2600(band 38) / 2300(band 40) / 2500(band 41) / 1900(band 39) / 3500(band 42) / 3700(band 43), FD-LTE 2100(band 1) / 1800(band 3) / 2600(band 7) / 900(band 8) / 700(band 28) / 1900(band 2) / 1700(band 4) / 850(band 5) / 700(band 13) / 700(band 17) / 800(band 20) / 850(band 26), 3G Bands : UMTS 1900 / 2100 / 850 / 900 MHz, 2G Bands : GSM 1800 / 1900 / 850 / 900 MHz, GPRS : Available, EDGE : Available This is all confirmed by benchmark tests too, with the Edge 40 scoring 3542 points in the Geekbench 6 multi-core test. For context, the Google Pixel 6a scored 2900, while the slightly cheaper Samsung Galaxy A54 scored 2703. In fact, it’s not far from the Realme GT 3’s 3842 and that uses the (year old) flagship Snapdragon 8+ Gen 1.

According to Motorola, the Edge 40's HDR10+ compatible OLED display with a resolution of 2400 x 1080 pixels is supposed to have a peak brightness of up to 1200 nits. The smartphone even surpasses this mark in our tests, achieving up to 1345 cd/m² in the APL18 test. The other specs here are decent, but reflective of the lower price of this phone compared to the Edge 40 Pro. There's 8GB RAM and 256GB of storage, but it’s LPDDR4 RAM and UFS 3.1 storage, so a bit older, slower and less power efficient than what you’ll find in the Edge 40 Pro. It’s the same story elsewhere: the USB-C is 2.0 and not 3.2, Bluetooth is 5.2 and not 5.3, and so on. The dual speakers for audio are tuned with Dolby Atmos and sound great, but get some of the best cheap wireless earbuds if you want to use it outside. The Edge 40 supports all common cellular standards apart from 5G Sub6. With 21 4G bands and 14 5G bands, it offers solid frequency coverage, so you should get reception at almost any location.

Motorola Edge 40 review: Clean Android and long-lasting

It’s just frustrating that the phone’s auto-refresh rate setting doesn’t ever crank it up to the full 144Hz, instead capping out at 120Hz. If you want the smoothest refresh rate possible, it does come at the cost of overall battery life. The design is closely related to that of the Moto Edge 30 Fusion with the design and build much the same, but it boosts the waterproofing over the older phone which was only IP52. The Edge 40 uses the GPS (L1, L5), Glonass (L1), Galileo (E1, E5a) and Beidou (B1, B2a) satellite navigation services to determine its location. The smartphone thus achieves a very precise location when stationary. Our position is pinpointed at an accuracy of up to 2 meters indoors and up to 1 meter outdoors. All mobile phones are designed and manufactured by Motorola Mobility LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Lenovo.

Video performance is rather solid with OIS smoothing out jittery hand movements – at least when using the main rear sensor – with fun video modes like Portrait Video and a unique stabilisation mode that’ll work when rotated a full 360 degrees further improving the experience. It caps out at 4K@30fps both on the front and rear, with the former being fairly unique in the mid-range market. Performance The Motorola Edge 40 runs Motorola's MYUX software, powered by Android 13. It's a very Pixel-like OS that's clean and unobtrusive. You can enjoy speed and lots of storage space as the phone comes with 8 GB of RAM and 256 GB of internal storage so that you can store all your songs, videos, games, and other stuff with the utmost convenience. In addition to this, you can play games, listen to music, multitask, and stream content smoothly as the phone is powered with Octa core (2.6 GHz, Quad core, Cortex A78 + 2 GHz, Quad core, Cortex A55) MediaTek Dimensity 8020 processor. In all honesty, I preferred shooting on the standard Photo mode as I found the shallow f/1.4 aperture would deliver a softer, more natural bokeh than the OTT option from the Portrait app. Motorola is going all-in on the Edge 40’s photography prowess, not in terms of the sheer number of cameras but the performance of said lenses. That’s particularly true of the new 50MP main snapper that, while identical to its predecessor on paper, boasts a couple of key upgrades that should deliver impressive results.



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