Introduction
Motorola has launched a new member of the Moto Z series - the Moto Z3. However, its actual announcement has raised many eyebrows and has us wondering if the Moto Z3 is more of a refresh of the Z2 than a real successor.
The most significant change on the Moto Z3 is the addition of a taller 6-inch Super AMOLED display, a frame-mounted fingerprint scanner, and a fresh new glossy finish around the frame and on the pretty rear glass. None of these features, however, were any mystery since the Moto Z3 Play has the exact same design elements.
Interestingly, Motorola didn't bother to mention its "Force" branding that was synonymous with the Moto Z2 when it launched and was marketed as a shatter-proof smartphone. Shatter protection has gone out the window with Motorola, likely due to the soft plastic display that was super easy to scratch on the Z2.
Moto Z3 specs
- Body: 6000 series Aluminum and all-glass rear; splash-resistant P2i6 (repellent nano-coating)
- Display: 6.01-inch Super AMOLED with FHD+ (2160x1080 px) resolution
- Rear camera: Dual 12MP (f/2.0, 1.25 micron) RGB + (f/2.0, 1.25 micron) Monochrome; Phase-detection AF + Laser AF; CCT (Color Correlated Temperature); dual-tone LED flash; "Zero Shutter Lag"
- Front camera: 8MP; f/2.0; 1.12 micron; 84-degree FOV; full-screen flash
- Video recording: 4K (2160p)@30fps on main camera; 1080p@30fps on front-camera
- OS: Android 8.1 Oreo with Moto Experiences
- Chipset: Qualcomm Snapdragon 835: Octa-core Kryo (4x2.35 GHz & 4x1.9 GHz); 850 MHz Adreno 540 GPU
- Memory: 4GB of RAM + 64GB of internal storage: up to 2TB expansion via microSD
- Battery: 3,000 mAh non-removable Li-ion
- Connectivity: nano-SIM; LTE; Bluetooth 5.0; Wi-FI a/b/g/n 2.4GHz + ac 5GHz; GPS, A-GPS, GLONASS; BEIDOU; NFC; Verizon 5G upgradable via future MotoMod;
- Misc: Side-mounted fingerprint scanner; face unlock; Moto Mod compatibility; Moto Actions; 3.5mm headphone jack via USB-C
Before you ask - yes, the spec sheet is correct. Motorola didn't update any internals of the Moto Z3, keeping last year's Snapdragon 835 and not bumping the RAM up from 4GB. To be fair, this configuration is still great even in today's standards. In this industry, however, nobody wants to hear that one-year-old tech is still good a full year later.
The bigger part of the announcement was Verizon and Qualcomm's collaboration to launch Verizon's 5G network next year. Motorola ties into the announcement with a 5G Moto Mod modem that would make the Moto Z3 (and presumably older Moto Z devices) take advantage of Verizon's 5G network once it goes live next year.
The Moto Z3 shows us a different strategy than we've seen in a while. Unlike when HTC released the overpriced Bolt with an old Snapdragon 810 (which constantly overheated) Motorola is pricing the Moto Z3 very aggressively with hopes it will boost sales and leverage the 5G hype.
Verizon hopes it does boost sales since the device will be available exclusively from Verizon in the US. We also expect to see Verizon offer some lucrative promotions to get folks to switch to Verizon with the Z3's upgradable 5G as an incentive.
No matter how different (or similar) the Moto Z3 is from its predecessor, we're still going to review it like any other flagship. We'll be looking to see how the larger new display affects battery life, whether the camera sees any improvements, and whether the Moto Z3 is a worthy upgrade over the Moto Z2.
Let's take a look at this retail packaging first.
Verizon Moto Z3 unboxing
We have a Verizon variant of the phone with bold red packaging and some cool black stripes along the sides. The box's sleeve comes off and it opens to the right.
The Moto Z3 comes with a documents pack, a USB-C to USB-A adapter, TurboPower wall adapter, and a 3.5mm headphone jack to USB-C adapter.
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