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The Motorola Edge 50 Fusion lands like a tranquil summer evening rather than a blaze of fireworks: it’s unassuming, comfortable, and surprisingly easy to get along with. The minute the 6.7-inch pOLED curves into your palm, two things hit you that you don’t see much from mid-rangers: a weight under 175 g, and a back that is actually matte. The vegan-leather choice feels like suede, not plastic, and despite a week of pocketing it between house keys and pocket change it looks brand-new out of the box, no filmy case necessary.
Everyday performance is courtesy of the Snapdragon 7s Gen 2 — not a headline-grabbing chip, but Motorola’s near-stock Android 14 keeps the interface as light as linen. Apps open in an instant, even demanding ones such as Genshin Impact, which ran the game at medium settings at a delightful 45 fps without plummeting into potato mode, and the phone’s 68 W charger slurped the 5000 mAh cell from 5 % to 70 % while I showered. The phone lacks wireless charging, but the battery itself is wily; I went to bed with 25 % remaining even after some camera-intense vacation days.
The star here, when it comes to cameras, is the 50 MP main sensor with OIS. Colors are more on the natural side, shadows hold their textures, and the shutter is virtually instantaneous. The 13 MP ultra-wide tries to keep up but it doesn't have the dynamic range of the main lens; however, edge distortion is kept in check and it's great for those tight tapas bars. Creamy skin tones with the 32 MP selfie shooter, and no beauty-filter wax museum effect. Low-light capabilities shocked me: Handheld night shots along the riverfront in Seville held lantern glows with no smudging to the sky.
Motorola’s software philosophy deserves applause. No redundant apps or casino-style ads, only clean material and thoughtful gestures — chop-chop for flashlight, twist-twist for camera — that I’ve already grown to use without thinking about it any more. Three years of OS updates and four of security patches is respectable, but still one step below the Pixel.
Where the Motorola Edge 50 Fusion falls down is in small, but very perceptible areas. The one downward-facing speaker is loud but hollow, cupping it is mandatory for TikTok in bed. Haptics are generic, a slight buzz instead of the stiff raps you get from flagship motors. But though the IP68 rating is very much appreciated, there is no official charger in the box from Motorola, which once again feels slightly ironic given that one of the phone’s headline features is that 68W wired speed.
But those feel like quibbles on a device that’s about half the price of a Galaxy S24. 10 days in and the Edge 50 Fusion is that mate who never dominates conversation but always has snacks. It doesn’t shout, it just delivers: a body that’s easy to forget, a screen that you won’t stop scrolling and battery life that soaks up your sloth, alongside cameras that make you look like you’d planned the shot even if you hadn’t. If “good enough” had an admiral cousin, it would resemble this.
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Smooth 144Hz display. |
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Strong battery life. |
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Fast 68W charging. |
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IP68 dust/water resistance. |
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Good main camera (50MP OIS). |
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Premium vegan leather design. |
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No wireless charging. |
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Mid-range processor (7s Gen 2/6 Gen 1). |
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No telephoto lens. |
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Plastic frame (feels less premium). |
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Limited software update promise. |
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Average low-light video performance. |
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