Evan Blass, one of the most famous leaks in the mobility segment, published two photos via 91mobiles Moto Razr 3 on which its appearance can be clearly appreciated.
Blass explains that the Moto Razr 3, codenamed Motorola Maven, was completely redesigned to look more like the Galaxy Z Flip 3 than previously released Razr and Razr 5G models. The third generation of the Motorola folding smartphone is now a bit more angular and has moved the fingerprint sensor to the power button.

At the camera level, Motorola will try to improve in this regard by incorporating a dual configuration on the back, which will follow what the Samsung Galaxy Z Flip 3 did. These cameras include main 50 megapixel af / 1.8 aperture together with another widescreen and macro sensor with a native resolution of 13 megapixels. For selfie, there is a 32 megapixel camera that has been inserted through a hole at the top of the screen, something that has long been commonplace.
It seems that the company originally intended to launch two Moto Razr 3 or Motorola Maven variants with different Snapdragon 8 SoC models, but the delay in SoC deliveries may have changed its plans, so it is not clear how it will end up. launching different device variants. For now, the proposed configurations would have 8 or 12 gigabytes of RAM and 256 or 512 gigabytes of storage. (Obviously, the percentage is reserved for Android, the operating system).

The Moto Razr 3 could go on sale in China between late July and early August this year in two colors: quartz black and calm blue. A global launch should take place shortly thereafter, although the price at which it will eventually sell is yet to be seen.
As we can see, the Moto Razr 3 aims to be an important evolution within Motorola’s line of folding smartphones, it can even be a turning point for the brand. However, despite the media noise, folding smartphones are still a product that is not as entrenched among users, or what is the same, they are still something more specialized than mainstream.
In addition to features, we’ll see if the Razr Engine 3 or the Motorola Maven contribute something evolutionary within a segment that has been plagued by things like questionable screen resilience.