A
great handset for clumsy clots, Motorola guarantees the Moto XM Force's screen
against cracks and shattering for four years
Motorola
has a habit of doing this. Occasionally it comes up with a product everyone’s
been gagging for, yet no other manufacturer has yet thought to produce. The
last time it happened, the result was the Motorola Razr Maxx with its enormous
battery. This time, it’s the Motorola Moto X Force.
What
makes this phone so different? It’s sheer toughness, that’s what. The Motorola
Moto X Force is so rugged, so resistant to drops and screen breakage that a
Motorola representative was perfectly happy for me to throw the phone at the
floor, stamp on it and smash as hard as I liked on the corner of the
meeting-room table when he came in to demonstrate the phone to me.
And it
isn’t just individual Motorola reps. Motorola is so confident in its new
ShatterShield technology - which it says took three years to develop - it’s
guaranteeing the screen for an unprecedented four years against all kinds of
accidental breakage. Whether you crack the display by simply dropping it on the
pavement from your pocket, or throw it inadvertently in the path of a rampaging
elephant, Motorola is confident it will survive - assuming the underlying electronics
are still functioning, of course. Read the small print and you’ll discover that
the phone isn’t “shock resistant”.
This
is a BIG deal, because no matter who you are, how careful you are with your
phone, whether you strap a case to the rear or not, you’ve likely broken or
smashed it at one time or another. It’s a painful experience - all the more so
if you don’t have some kind of insurance to cover you. It’s also nice to know
that the Moto X Force is splashproof, and won’t necessarily go to its watery
grave if you drop it in the toilet.
It
might well pong for a bit afterwards, though. Don’t say I didn’t warn you.
Motorola
Moto X Force review: Design and practicalities
And
here’s another big surprise: The Motorola Moto X Force isn’t ugly. There’s no
lumpen protective chassis or bright yellow, building-site colour scheme. If
someone handed you a Motorola X Force to you in the shop, or a mate showed it
off to you in the pub, you wouldn’t think it was any different from most other
smartphones.
My
review sample (kindly supplied by the lovely people at Mobile Fun), was clad in
smart black “ballistic nylon” at the rear and surrounded by a gunmetal-grey aluminium
frame. It isn’t the thinnest smartphone you’ll have ever come across (10.1mm),
nor the lightest (it weighs 169g), but it looks smart and feels extremely well
made.
If
black isn’t your thing, you can customise the look of the phone via the Moto Maker website, where
you’ll find five different colour nylon backs to choose from, six “soft grip”
rear panels and three different types of “pebbled” leather panel (dark brown,
light brown and black), as well as engraving and several choices for various
“accent” colours (the speaker grille on the front and the edging around the
camera, flash and Motorola dimple on the rear).
In
practical terms, there’s plenty else good about the X Force - it’s not all about
ruggedness. It has a microSD card expansion slot to complement an
already-generous 32GB or 64GB of onboard storage, and although the battery is
sealed in and not user-replaceable, its capacity is a cavernous 3,760mAh.
Motorola Moto X Force review: Display
With
so many protective layers covering the Moto X Force’s 5.4in 1,440 x 2,560
AMOLED LCD panel, there’s a very real danger that quality will suffer. The
ShatterShield stack is five layers thick, and the last layer is a super-tough,
plastic screen protector. That’s a LOT of material for the light to pass
through, and it has an impact.
At
some angles - outdoors in bright sunshine, for example - the screen appears
slightly washed out and lacking in contrast, and readability isn’t helped by a
limited maximum brightness of only 337cd/m2. That’s a good deal lower than the
Apple’s IPS-based displays and Samsung’s Super AMOLED panels.
I’m
not convinced the plastic topping will stay as spotless in the long term as a
Gorilla Glass-fronted display, either. Sure, it may not crack, but the softer
plastic surface was already beginning to pick up minor scuffs after a week, and
that will affect its ability to shrug off grease and grime in the long term.
Motorola tells me the front layer is easy and cheap to replace in-store,
though, so at least if it gets really bad, there is a simple way to fix it.
Finally,
this isn’t the most colour accurate display, with most colours - particular
mid-red tones - considerably off beam. The result is a punchy, brightly
colourful display, but one that that looks a touch over the top.
Motorola Moto X Force review:
Performance and battery life
If
the screen offers a middling performance, the X Force’s all-round performance
is anything but. Inside, is a Snapdragon 810, backed by 3GB of RAM and an
Adreno 430 graphics chip.
In
terms of raw speed this lineup can’t match the Apple iPhone 6s or iPhone 6s
Plus for raw speed, but it’s the equal of pretty much every other flagship
device on the market right now, including the Samsung Galaxy S6. That won’t
change until we begin to see new smartphones emerge based on Qualcomm’s
Snapdragon 820 chip in 2016.
Sure,
it gets a little toasty if you spend 20 minutes or more playing Riptide GP2 at
full detail settings, but the chassis has been designed that the heat isn’t
concentrated in one place, and the nylon back helps insulate your fingers from
the worst of it.
Motorola
Moto X Force
|
Samsung
Galaxy S6
|
Apple
iPhone 6s
|
|
Geekbench
3, single-core
|
1,248
|
1,427
|
2,532
|
Geekbench
3, multi-core
|
4,102
|
4,501
|
4,417
|
GFXBench
3, Manhattan onscreen
|
16fps
|
15fps
|
55fps
|
GFXBench
3, Manhattan offscreen
|
25fps
|
23fps
|
40fps
|
More
impressive than this, though, is battery life. Despite the high-power
processor, the enormous 3,740mAh battery squeezed inside the Force delivers
seriously impressive stamina. Even with comparatively heavy use - a bit of
gaming on the way to and from work, plenty of camera testing, and my usual load
of web browsing and messaging - the Force would always get me through a day of
use and some way into the second.
In
the world of the modern smartphone, silly as it seems, that’s good going.
Moreover, in testing, the Moto X Force put in a stellar performance, lasting a stunning
15hrs 12mins in our video rundown test. That places it only a hair’s breadth
behind one of the longest stayers I’ve ever come across - the Samsung Galaxy
Note 4 - and significantly ahead of my current favourite, the Nexus 6P,
although the 6P remains excellent under heavy load.
It’s
also lightning-quick to charge up. Using the Turbo Charger supplied in the box,
I saw the phone hit 80% in a mere 50 minutes, 90% in an hour and 100% in 1hr
33mins, and when you leave the phone in standby overnight, it barely loses any
juice at all. Typically, I was seeing a drop of below 5%.
Motorola
Moto X Force
|
Google
Nexus 6P
|
Samsung
Galaxy Note 4
|
||
Battery
test result
|
15hrs
12mins
|
11hrs
58mins
|
15hrs
36mins
|
|
Moto X Force review: Camera
As
for the camera, the Motorola X Force is equipped with identical hardware to the
Moto X Style, although Motorola says that the processing has been tweaked a
little here. This produces 21-megapixel images from optics that have an f/2.0
aperture and phase detect autofocus, but disappointingly no optical image
stabilisation (OIS). On the front, there’s a 5-megapixel camera equipped with
its own, single-LED flash.
In
short, the camera is capable of producing good quality snaps, but it’s one step
behind the camera on the Nexus 6P, iPhone 6s, Samsung Galaxy S6 and the Sony
Xperia Z5. The main problem for it is the lack of OIS, which leads to more
shaky shots than I’d like to see. I’m also not keen on the amount of noise
reduction applied to low-light shots. This lends photographs a rather soft,
smeary look.
Otherwise,
video quality (you can shoot at resolutions up to 4K) is good, with especially
effective digital image stabilisation and smooth exposure transitions when you
pan from light to dark areas.
The
camera app is simple, yet effective, and although there’s no manual mode, there
are some nice touches. I’m a particular fan of the draggable exposure reticule,
which allows quick and easy brightness adjustments, and Motorola’s camera
launch gesture. The latter lets to fire up the camera with a double twist of
the wrist, even when the Moto X Force is in standby.
Motorola Moto X Force review:
Software
The
other thing that I’ve long liked about Motorola handsets is the company’s
insistence on running all-but pure Android on its handsets. The Moto X Force is
no different in this respect. Here, you get Android 5.1.1, with an upgrade to
Marshmallow promised soon, and it’s embellished with the usual Motorola
accoutrements.
I’ve
already mentioned the seriously useful camera launch gesture, but there are
other nice extras here as well. You can set up a double “karate” chop gesture
to activate the phone’s torch mode. Attentive display keeps the screen on while
you’re looking at it. Moto Voice adds extensive voice control to the phone.
Motorola Assist lets you set up automated, context-sensitive actions (such as
putting the phone into do not disturb mode overnight at home. Finally, there’s
the old staple, Moto display, which shows you recent notifications on your
standby screen when you wave your hand over the screen.
Aside
from these features - accessed via the preloaded Moto app - Motorola foists
only one proprietary app upon its customers: its Gallery app, chief among whose
talents is the creation of video-based highlight reels. It’s okay, but surplus
to requirements. I think I’ll stick with Google Photos.
Motorola Moto X Force review: Verdict
The
one gaping hole in the Motorola Moto X Force’s long list of features is a
fingerprint reader. After using a series of reader-enabled handsets over the
last few months, I’m firmly of the opinion that, when implemented well, this is
a technology well worth having on your smartphone, and the lack of one here is
a black mark against the Moto X Force.
Added
to the middling display quality and slightly off-the-pace camera, and it’s
clear you’re not getting the best of the best here. It’s quite an expensive
phone as well, at £100 more than the Motorola X Style and £60 pricier than the
superlative Nexus 6P.
Still,
Motorola’s newest smartphone does get an awful lot right, not least the fact
that it’s as tough as the proverbial old boot, and has great battery life as
well. For serial phone smashers around the globe, it will be an absolute
revelation.
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