Single SIM (Nano-SIM) or Hybrid Dual SIM (Nano-SIM, dual stand-by)
Moto x force specs full#
Pros: literally shatterproof screen, excellent display, fast, great battery life, good camera, microSD card slot, turbo charging, wireless chargingĬons: no fingerprint scanner, no Android 6.Motorola Moto X Force - Full Specifications, Price, Features Also known as Motorola Moto X Force Dual SIM with dual-SIM card slotsĪndroid 5.1.1 (Lollipop), upgradable to 7.0 (Nougat) If you ever drop your phone or think you might, the Moto X Force is the answer. There are a few downsides: it doesn’t ship with the latest version of Android, is vulnerable to Stagefright, there is no fingerprint scanner, and it won’t be aesthetically pleasing to most.īut all of those are far outweighed by the fact that you simply can’t smash the screen. It’s solid, lasts two days at a pinch, has a decent camera, wireless charging and great-looking screen. The Moto X Force is an excellent road-warrior phone.
Moto x force specs plus#
The Motorola Moto X Force costs £499 for the 32GB version and £534 for the 64GB version.įor comparison, an iPhone 6S Plus costs £619, a Google Nexus 6P costs £449 and a Samsung Galaxy S6 Edge+ costs £555. SoftwareĪ microUSB port in the base - no USB-C to be found here. There’s a microSD card slot in the sim tray in the top of the device for adding more storage. It didn’t die when I spilt coffee on it, which is good. The Force isn’t waterproof, but has a water repellent coating, which will help it survive a drink being spilt over it. Only Sony’s Xperia Z5 Compact has consistently lasted longer in my testing.
Moto x force specs Bluetooth#
With about two hours of browsing, hundreds of push notifications and emails, as well as 90 minutes of listening to music via Bluetooth headphones a day, it would be on its last legs when going to bed on the second day and dead by the time I woke up for the third day. I found the Force consistently lasted two working days, but not quite 48 hours. For comparison, the Samsung Galaxy S6 Edge+ has a 3,000mAh battery and the iPhone 6S Plus a 2,750mAh battery. Motorola says the Moto X Force should last 48 hours of mixed use with a large 3,760 milliampere-hour battery. It got quite warm when downloading multiple things, but wasn’t overly hot when playing games or other demanding tasks. It feels snappy and powers through pretty much anything. The Moto X Force has Qualcomm’s top-of-the-line 810 processor with 3GB of RAM, which is pretty standard for a flagship smartphone from 2015. Dual sim support is not available in the UK. The sim card tray also takes a microSD card. The front-facing speakers below the screen are not a stereo pair, but are loud enough to annoy everyone on the train. It’s a high-quality display that shows no visible signs that it is different from those fitted to devices such as a Samsung Galaxy S6 or iPhone 6S. It’s pin-sharp, has very good blacks and is bright and vibrant. The quad HD 5.4in AMOLED is of very high density with 540 pixels per inch, which makes it one of the crispest smartphones available. But it’s relatively light, weighing 169g – which is 9g lighter than the 7.3mm thick Nexus 6P and 23g lighter than the 7.3mm iPhone 6S Plus. The Force is quite chunky by today’s standards at 9.2mm thick. It’s wide, solid and feels like a work horse that can take a beating, which is rather the point. The phone has a trapezoid cross section and a back that comes covered in black nylon by default. The front of the device looks utilitarian, with a front-facing flash and two front-ported speakers at the bottom. The Moto X Force isn’t a phone you would describe as pretty. The build quality is excellent and the screen is crisp and bright.