Gadget Scout Review

Motorola Edge 70 Pro+: The 6,500mAh Battery Beast That Punches Above Its Price Tag

A seriously bright 144Hz AMOLED, 90W charging and a battery that refuses to quit make Motorola's ambitious upper-mid-range phone very easy to understand.

The Motorola Edge 70 Pro+ pairs a large 6.8-inch display with a surprisingly slim body and a 6,500mAh silicon-carbon battery.

The Motorola Edge 70 Pro+ is the sort of phone that makes the usual battery-anxiety routine feel faintly silly. It has a 6,500mAh battery in a body around 7.2mm thick, charges at 90W, and still finds room for a 144Hz AMOLED display rated at a frankly bonkers 5,200 nits peak brightness. Motorola did not simply make a bigger phone and call it a day. This is a very deliberate attempt at a sensible flagship alternative.

In the UK, the 12GB/512GB model launched at £749.99. That is a meaningful amount of money, obviously, but it remains below the four-figure territory occupied by many conventional flagships. The question is not whether the Edge 70 Pro+ is cheap. It plainly is not. The better question is whether it spends its money in places you will notice every single day. In my view, it mostly does.

The headline act is the battery, but that would be a one-note story if the rest of the package were ordinary. It is not. There is a bright, fast, HDR10+ AMOLED panel; a Dimensity 8500 Extreme chipset with UFS 4.1 storage; robust IP68/IP69 protection and MIL-STD-810H certification; and, on this Pro+ specification, a triple 50MP camera system capped by a 3.5x periscope telephoto. That is a lot of phone before we have even talked about the 50MP autofocus selfie camera.

8.8/10 Gadget Scout rating
Battery
9.6/10
Display
9.3/10
Performance
8.6/10
Cameras
8.4/10
Value
8.8/10
How we test and researchOur recommendations combine hands-on experience with manufacturer specifications, measurements and findings from trusted professional reviewers, and real-world feedback from UK owners. We re-check the key facts, prices and availability regularly and update this guide as new products launch. Where we link to a retailer we may earn a small commission, which never affects what we recommend.

What You Get in the Box — And What Motorola Didn't Skimp On

There is an increasingly tiresome ritual attached to buying an expensive smartphone: you unbox it, admire the handset, then discover you need to find or buy a suitably powerful charger. Motorola took a more practical approach here. The Edge 70 Pro+ came with a 90W TurboPower charger, a USB-C cable, a SIM ejector tool and a protective case alongside the phone itself.

That bundled charger matters more than it first appears. A 90W charging claim is only useful if you have the correct power brick to unlock it, and this is not a phone that ought to be fed through an old, low-output adapter found at the bottom of a kitchen drawer. Including the hardware needed to achieve the advertised charging performance is refreshingly straightforward. No scavenger hunt. No peculiar add-on purchase. Lovely.

For UK buyers, the retail configuration brought 12GB of RAM and 512GB of UFS 4.1 storage. That is generous capacity for a phone intended to be kept for several years. It also removes some low-level friction from ownership. You are less likely to be constantly pruning downloads, moving video files around or fretting over whether the next large game will fit. Storage space is not glamorous, but a big, quick storage allocation is one of those things you appreciate quietly every week.

Why the included charger is a genuine value win

The Edge 70 Pro+ reached around 40% after 15 minutes, 73% after 30 minutes and a full charge in 49 minutes in charging testing. Including the 90W charger means those figures are not merely theoretical benefits sitting on a specification sheet.

90W TurboPower charging

A near-empty battery can become useful very quickly, while a full recharge still takes under an hour.

12GB RAM and 512GB UFS 4.1 storage

The UK configuration gives the phone substantial headroom for multitasking, apps, games and local media.

Protection built into the purchase

The bundled case is a useful immediate safeguard for a handset with a large screen and a premium price.

Design & Build: Slim, Serious, and Surprisingly Restrained

Motorola Edge 70 Pro+ concept visualisation
Motorola Edge 70 Pro+ — concept visualisation

Put the battery capacity to one side for a moment and the Edge 70 Pro+ is already a notably slim large-screen phone. It measures 7.19mm thick, with the quoted weight sitting around 183g to 190g depending on variant. Those figures make more sense once you remember the size of the cell inside. A 6,500mAh battery generally brings expectations of a chunky, workmanlike slab. Motorola avoided that trap.

The 6.8-inch form factor is undeniably large, so anyone hoping for a compact one-handed handset should look elsewhere. No amount of elegant engineering changes basic geometry. Yet the phone's slim profile prevents it from feeling like a brick, and the relatively restrained weight helps it avoid the top-heavy, wrist-tiring character that can spoil big-screen devices. It is substantial without being needlessly theatrical.

This matters in everyday use because a battery phone lives with you. It is the handset you take on a long train day, the one you use for navigation, the one you lean on for work messages, photos and video when a power bank would normally become part of the plan. If it felt clumsy every time you picked it up, the endurance would be less persuasive. The Edge 70 Pro+ feels designed to be used rather than merely admired in a capacity chart.

Motorola also put durability unusually high on the agenda. The phone carried IP68 and IP69 ratings plus MIL-STD-810H certification. It was rated for dust, splashes and water exposure, including submersion in still fresh water up to 1.5 metres for up to 30 minutes, as well as protection against powerful high-temperature water jets for up to 30 seconds. That is a reassuring level of protection for a phone that will likely be your travel companion and camera on days when the British weather has other ideas.

Display size
6.8-inch AMOLED
Thickness
7.19mm
Weight
Around 183–190g
Battery
6,500mAh silicon-carbon
Water protection
IP68 / IP69
Durability
MIL-STD-810H
Security
In-display fingerprint scanner
Audio
Dual speakers with Dolby Atmos

The Edge 70 Pro+ demonstrates why silicon-carbon batteries are becoming important: much more capacity without turning the phone into a pocket-sized paving stone.

IP ratings are welcome insurance, not an invitation to treat the phone as underwater camera equipment. The specified protection applies to controlled conditions, including still fresh water rather than every possible wet mishap.

That Display: 5,200 Nits of Brilliance, With a Useful Reality Check

Motorola Edge 70 Pro+ concept visualisation
Motorola Edge 70 Pro+ — concept visualisation

The Edge 70 Pro+ has a 6.8-inch AMOLED display with Full-HD+ resolution, a 144Hz refresh rate and HDR10+ support. Those are strong fundamentals. AMOLED gives it the contrast and deep blacks buyers expect at this level, while 144Hz keeps scrolling, interface movement and supported games looking exceptionally fluid. It is a screen that makes ordinary tasks feel a little more polished, which sounds trivial until you go back to something slower.

Then there is Motorola's headline brightness figure: 5,200 nits peak. On paper, that is extremely aggressive. It is double the 2,600-nit figure associated with the Samsung Galaxy S25+ and well beyond the iPhone 16 Pro Max's 2,000-nit outdoor peak figure. But, as ever, peak brightness is a number that needs translating. It is normally achieved under specific conditions and over a small portion of the display, rather than representing the brightness you will see across the entire panel while reading the news on a sunny pavement.

The measured results are still excellent. In a 75% display-window test, the panel reached almost 2,000 nits. With a 10% window, it surpassed 3,000 nits. That does not make the 5,200-nit claim meaningless; it simply puts it in the correct context. The narrow-window peak is a maximum capability. The more useful result is that large portions of the panel can get extremely bright, which is precisely what helps with outdoor readability.

In practical terms, this is a screen that should cope very well with bright daylight. Maps, messages, camera framing and video all benefit when you are not squinting at a reflection of your own eyebrows. The fact that Motorola coupled that brightness with a 144Hz refresh rate is equally important. Some phones can look fabulous in a shop demo and then feel oddly compromised in daily motion. The Edge 70 Pro+ avoids that mismatch.

Claimed peak brightness
5,200 nits
Measured 10% display window
Over 3,000 nits
Measured 75% display window
Almost 2,000 nits
Display brightness figure Motorola Edge 70 Pro+ Samsung Galaxy S25+ iPhone 16 Pro Max
Quoted peak brightness 5,200 nits 2,600 nits 2,000 nits outdoor peak
Measured 75% window Almost 2,000 nits
Measured 10% window Over 3,000 nits

The caveat is not really a criticism; it is more a reminder to read brightness marketing with a raised eyebrow. The 5,200-nit number is not the everyday figure. Yet even after that sensible correction, the Edge 70 Pro+ remains a standout for screen visibility. That is the useful conclusion. Not the one that fits most neatly on a billboard, perhaps, but definitely the one that matters.

Performance: Dimensity 8500 Extreme Does the Heavy Lifting

Motorola Edge 70 Pro+ concept visualisation
Motorola Edge 70 Pro+ — concept visualisation

Motorola used MediaTek's Dimensity 8500 Extreme chipset here, paired with 8GB or 12GB of RAM and either 256GB or 512GB of UFS 4.1 storage. It is a pragmatic choice. This is not presented as an all-costs-no-object flagship chip, and that is fine. The whole point of the Edge 70 Pro+ is to invest heavily in the experiences that make a phone pleasant over a long day: battery, charging, display, storage and camera versatility.

The benchmark result gives the chipset real credibility. The phone recorded an AnTuTu score of 2,285,536. A single benchmark never tells you everything, but that is a properly strong result for this part of the market and underlines that the Edge 70 Pro+ is not coasting along on its battery credentials. It has performance available for demanding apps, sustained day-to-day multitasking and modern gaming.

Gaming results were particularly encouraging. BGMI ran at stable frame rates around 112 FPS, while Genshin Impact held a constant 60 FPS on high settings. Those are not casual-game numbers. They show that the phone can deliver a genuinely enjoyable experience in titles that are often used to separate merely quick handsets from properly capable ones.

There is a sensible thermal story to go with that speed. The Edge 70 Pro+ used a 4,600mm² vapour chamber cooling system, and Motorola's approach appeared to favour sustained comfort rather than chasing an impressive burst of benchmark glory before turning the handset into a hand warmer. After around 30 minutes of intensive gaming, performance did drop and frame-rate dips became more noticeable. Crucially, the phone did not become uncomfortably hot.

A performance profile that makes sense

The Edge 70 Pro+ is quick enough to play demanding games properly, but its more interesting trick is staying comfortable while doing so. For most people, that is a better trade than a brief benchmark win followed by aggressive heat.

AnTuTu benchmark score
2,285,536
BGMI frame rate
Around 112 FPS
Genshin Impact, high settings
60 FPS

UFS 4.1 storage deserves a quick mention because it is one of the less glamorous specifications that can make a phone feel expensive in the right way. Faster storage benefits app launches, loading larger games and handling bigger local files. The 512GB configuration is especially well aligned with the camera system and gaming performance: you can actually make use of both without immediately having to juggle storage.

A Dimensity 8500 Extreme chipset, 12GB of RAM and UFS 4.1 storage give the Edge 70 Pro+ far more than enough speed for demanding daily use.

Camera System: Three 50MP Lenses and a Lot to Prove

The Pro+ camera arrangement is unusually well rounded on paper. There is a 50MP Sony Lytia 710 main camera, a 50MP ultrawide with autofocus, and a 50MP periscope telephoto with optical image stabilisation and 3.5x optical zoom. On the front, Motorola used a 50MP camera with autofocus. The consistency is the point. Instead of treating the secondary cameras as obligatory extras, Motorola gave each rear perspective substantial resolution.

That 3.5x periscope lens is the key differentiator. A proper optical telephoto changes what a phone camera can do day to day: portraits have a more flattering perspective, distant details become realistically reachable, and you can frame a shot rather than simply crop it aggressively afterwards. Motorola also offered up to 50x digital magnification through its Super Zoom Pro mode, though the more meaningful number here is the optical 3.5x reach.

The ultrawide has autofocus, which increases its usefulness beyond landscapes and group photos. Autofocus allows the lens to handle closer subjects too, giving it a flexibility that fixed-focus ultrawides simply do not have. Again, that is not necessarily a glamorous talking point, but it is exactly the kind of detail that makes a camera system feel considered rather than assembled from spare parts.

The main Sony Lytia 710 sensor should be the default lens for most images, while the telephoto and ultrawide expand the creative options without forcing a major drop in sensor resolution. You get three clear perspectives rather than one good camera surrounded by technical filler. That is a meaningful advantage at a price where compromises are often hiding in plain sight.

50MP main camera

The primary camera uses Sony's Lytia 710 sensor and forms the foundation of the rear-camera system.

50MP ultrawide with autofocus

A high-resolution ultrawide that can focus, adding flexibility for wide scenes and closer compositions.

50MP periscope telephoto with OIS

3.5x optical zoom brings useful reach, while optical image stabilisation helps support the telephoto camera.

50MP autofocus front camera

An autofocus selfie camera is a welcome inclusion for sharper front-facing images and video framing.

Be careful when comparing Edge 70 names across regions. The camera configuration discussed here is the Pro+ specification, equivalent in hardware terms to the global Edge 70 Pro, including the 50MP periscope telephoto and wireless charging support.

The camera hardware is ambitious, then, but it is also appropriately positioned. This is not a phone asking you to pay for flagship branding and then giving you a basic camera selection. Its broad camera specification complements the rest of the package: it is an endurance phone that is also equipped for travel, weekends away and the moments when you do not want to carry a separate camera. That is exactly how a phone at this level should think.

Battery Life: The Star of the Show, and the Numbers Back It Up

Here is the reason to pay attention to the Edge 70 Pro+ in the first place: its 6,500mAh silicon-carbon battery is enormous for a phone this slim. Traditional battery chemistry has long made handset design a fairly blunt compromise. Want a lot more capacity? Expect a lot more physical bulk. Silicon-carbon cells help shift that balance by packing more energy into a smaller, lighter form factor.

This is why the Edge 70 Pro+ can be only 7.19mm thick while carrying a cell that would once have implied a noticeably chunkier design. Battery technology can sound like the kind of thing marketing departments talk about because they have run out of colours to name. In this case, it translates directly into a better phone. More capacity without a correspondingly awkward shape is not a theoretical win. It is the win.

Independent endurance figures were excellent. Notebookcheck measured 21 hours and 37 minutes in a real-world Wi-Fi test. GSMArena's Active Use Score landed at roughly 19 hours. PCMark battery testing ran for slightly more than 16 hours. Any one metric should be treated as a guide rather than a personal promise, because your signal strength, display brightness, apps and gaming habits all matter. Taken together, though, these results tell a very clear story: this is among the strongest battery performers in its segment.

Daily usage backed that up, with average screen-on time consistently hovering around eight hours. A normal workday is no challenge at all, and two-day use was usually achievable. That is the transformational part. With many high-performance phones, you still start each day mentally accounting for the battery. You know where the cable is. You decide whether 45% is enough before leaving the house. The Edge 70 Pro+ gives you enough reserve that this calculation fades into the background.

Notebookcheck real-world Wi-Fi test
21h 37m
GSMArena Active Use Score
About 19 hours
PCMark battery benchmark
Over 16 hours
Typical screen-on time
About 8 hours

The 6,500mAh silicon-carbon cell is the Edge 70 Pro+'s central advantage, delivering endurance that comfortably changes day-to-day charging habits.

Big battery, quick recovery

Battery life is only half the story. From near empty, the Edge 70 Pro+ reached around 40% in 15 minutes and 73% in 30 minutes. A complete wired charge took 49 minutes. It is a rare combination: you can forget about charging for longer, then refill rapidly when you finally need to.

The phone also supports 15W wireless charging. That is not the fastest way to fill a 6,500mAh battery, and it does not need to be. Wireless charging is about convenience: dropping the phone onto a bedside pad, or giving it a slow, tidy top-up while you work. When speed matters, the included 90W wired charger is the obvious answer.

If you travel often, use navigation heavily, play games, shoot a lot of photos, spend time away from a desk or simply hate the nightly charging obligation, this battery is not a minor extra. It is the feature that should move the Edge 70 Pro+ to the top of your shortlist. Motorola made a phone for people who want to stop thinking about the percentage icon. I cannot think of a more useful ambition.

Software Experience: Android 16, Hello UI, and a Sensible Update Promise

The Edge 70 Pro+ arrived with Android 16 and Motorola's Hello UI. Starting with the current version of Android is a straightforward advantage, especially when you are buying a device designed to last rather than a cut-price handset you expect to replace quickly. It means you begin at the front of the software cycle instead of feeling as though you are catching up from day one.

Motorola committed the phone to three major OS updates and five years of security patches. That is a sensible support window for this class of device. It does not make the Edge 70 Pro+ immortal — no phone is — but it gives the large battery, generous storage and durable build a chance to earn their keep over time. Buying a 512GB phone with a five-year security commitment feels more coherent than buying a huge-capacity device with a short software runway.

Hello UI kept Motorola's software approach relatively clean and close to stock Android rather than burying the experience beneath a heavy visual skin. That will suit buyers who prefer a less cluttered interface and want the hardware features to take centre stage. It is also a good fit for the phone's broader character. The Edge 70 Pro+ is not trying to be flashy for the sake of it. It is trying to be useful, fast and very difficult to run flat.

Android 16 out of the box

The phone began its life on the current Android version, rather than launching with older software.

Three major OS updates

Motorola committed to three future Android-version upgrades for the Edge 70 Pro+.

Five years of security patches

A longer security commitment helps the phone remain a sensible long-term purchase.

Modern connectivity

5G, Wi-Fi 6E, Bluetooth 5.4, NFC and GPS cover the connectivity essentials expected from a modern premium handset.

Software preference remains personal. Some people want every possible feature presented immediately; others want a cleaner starting point. The Edge 70 Pro+ leans toward the latter. That makes sense here. The hardware is already doing plenty. It does not need the operating system trying to shout over it.

Motorola Edge 70 Pro+ Price and Value in the UK

The Motorola Edge 70 Pro+ launched in the UK at £749.99 for the 12GB RAM and 512GB storage configuration. That puts it in an interesting lane. It is more expensive than a conventional mid-range handset, but below the £1,000-plus pricing that has become normal among the biggest flagship names.

The value argument is not based on pretending £749.99 is pocket money. It is based on what arrives for that money. You are getting a 6,500mAh silicon-carbon battery, 90W charging hardware in the box, a 144Hz HDR10+ AMOLED display with exceptionally high brightness capability, 512GB of UFS 4.1 storage, IP68/IP69 protection, wireless charging and a triple 50MP camera system with a 3.5x periscope lens. That is a notably complete feature list.

UK launch configuration

£749.99

12GB RAM / 512GB UFS 4.1 storage

It is also worth remembering that the phone became available through Vodafone UK on 7 May 2026, following the global release on 29 April 2026. By July 2026, it had established its place as Motorola's answer for buyers who want a properly premium day-to-day experience without automatically paying flagship money.

The important word is balance. Plenty of phones can be excellent in one area. A gaming-focused device may be quicker. A camera flagship may have a more prestigious badge. A lower-priced phone may save you money upfront. The Edge 70 Pro+ aims to avoid an obvious weak point, and it succeeds particularly well in the areas that dictate whether a phone is a pleasure to own on a random Tuesday.

Where the Motorola Edge 70 Pro+ Wins — and Where It Does Not

The simplest reason to choose the Edge 70 Pro+ is that it brings together a huge battery, fast charging and a very bright display in a slim, durable body. That trio is unusually difficult to beat. Add strong gaming results, a broad camera setup and 512GB of storage in the UK model, and the Motorola begins to look like a phone built from a buyer's actual wish list rather than a boardroom's feature checklist.

The compromises are more about positioning than glaring faults. Extended intensive gaming produced more noticeable frame-rate dips after roughly 30 minutes, so dedicated performance chasers may prefer a device designed solely around sustained gaming output. The 6.8-inch screen also means this is a large phone. It is slim and manageable for its size, but it cannot become compact through the power of optimism.

Pros

  • Excellent 6,500mAh silicon-carbon battery in a slim body.
  • 90W wired charging reached a full charge in 49 minutes.
  • Bright 144Hz AMOLED display with strong measured brightness.
  • Three 50MP rear cameras, including a 3.5x OIS periscope lens.
  • 12GB/512GB UK configuration with UFS 4.1 storage.
  • IP68/IP69 protection and MIL-STD-810H certification.

Cons

  • Large 6.8-inch format will not suit compact-phone buyers.
  • Performance dips became more noticeable after prolonged intensive gaming.
  • The 5,200-nit figure is a narrow-window peak rather than everyday full-screen brightness.
  • £749.99 is under flagship money, but it is still a significant purchase.

A 144Hz AMOLED panel, periscope telephoto and durable IP68/IP69 build help the Edge 70 Pro+ feel more complete than a battery-focused specialist.

Who Should Buy the Motorola Edge 70 Pro+?

The Edge 70 Pro+ is not trying to suit absolutely everyone, and that is one of its strengths. It has a clear identity. Buy it because you value long endurance, a high-quality display and an unusually broad specification for the money, not because you want the smallest handset possible or because benchmark leadership is your sole hobby.

Best for battery-first buyers

If your current phone struggles to survive a busy day, the 6,500mAh battery and roughly two-day real-world potential are the Edge 70 Pro+'s strongest case.

Best for outdoor screen use

The 144Hz AMOLED display measured almost 2,000 nits over a 75% window and more than 3,000 nits over 10%, making it a strong fit for bright conditions.

Best for frequent travellers

Long battery life, fast 90W recharging, large 512GB storage and a versatile camera arrangement make this an excellent travel companion.

Best for flexible mobile photography

The 50MP main, ultrawide and 3.5x periscope cameras provide three meaningful rear perspectives instead of a token extra lens.

Best for balanced gaming

Stable BGMI performance around 112 FPS and Genshin Impact at 60 FPS on high settings make it capable for serious play without an uncomfortable thermal profile.

Best for storage-hungry users

The UK 12GB/512GB specification is ideal if you keep games, downloaded media, photos and large apps on your phone.

I would steer compact-phone enthusiasts away simply because a 6.8-inch display is a very deliberate commitment. I would also ask the most demanding competitive gamers to consider how they use their phone for long sessions, given the performance drop after extended intensive play. For almost everyone else, though, the Motorola's balance makes a compelling kind of sense.

Motorola Edge 70 Pro+ FAQ

How long does the Motorola Edge 70 Pro+ battery last?
Battery life is one of its defining strengths. Notebookcheck measured 21 hours and 37 minutes in a real-world Wi-Fi test, while GSMArena recorded roughly 19 hours in its Active Use Score. Average screen-on time hovered around eight hours, and the phone usually lasted two days in normal use.
How fast does the Motorola Edge 70 Pro+ charge?
Using its 90W wired charging, the Edge 70 Pro+ reached around 40% after 15 minutes and 73% after 30 minutes. A full charge took 49 minutes. It also supports 15W wireless charging.
Does the Motorola Edge 70 Pro+ include a charger?
Yes. The box included a 90W TurboPower charger, USB-C cable, SIM ejector tool and protective case alongside the handset. That is especially useful because the supplied charger enables the phone's headline wired charging performance.
Is the 5,200-nit display claim real?
It is a peak-brightness claim achieved in specific conditions. Independent measurements showed almost 2,000 nits with a 75% display window and more than 3,000 nits with a 10% window. Those measured figures are still excellent for bright outdoor use.
Does the Motorola Edge 70 Pro+ have a telephoto camera?
Yes. The Pro+ configuration includes a 50MP periscope telephoto camera with optical image stabilisation and 3.5x optical zoom. It sits alongside a 50MP main camera and a 50MP autofocus ultrawide.
Is the Motorola Edge 70 Pro+ good for gaming?
It is a capable gaming phone. BGMI ran at stable frame rates around 112 FPS, and Genshin Impact maintained 60 FPS on high settings. After around 30 minutes of intensive gaming, performance reduced and frame-rate dips became more noticeable, although the phone did not become uncomfortably hot.
How long will Motorola support the Edge 70 Pro+?
The phone came with Android 16 and was eligible for three major Android OS updates plus five years of security patches. That is a reasonable long-term support commitment for a phone with this much storage and battery capacity.
Is the Motorola Edge 70 Pro+ water resistant?
Yes. It has IP68 and IP69 ratings plus MIL-STD-810H certification. It was rated for submersion in still fresh water up to 1.5 metres for up to 30 minutes, and for protection against powerful high-temperature water jets for up to 30 seconds.

For buyers who want flagship-style endurance without crossing into four-figure pricing, the Edge 70 Pro+ makes an unusually coherent case.

Verdict: A Battery Champion That Does Not Neglect the Rest

The Motorola Edge 70 Pro+ is one of the most convincing upper-mid-range phones of 2026 because it solves a problem nearly everyone understands: battery life. Its 6,500mAh silicon-carbon cell is outstanding, its 90W charging is genuinely quick, and its 49-minute full-charge time ensures that even a rare flat battery is not a disaster.

More importantly, Motorola did not build an endurance specialist with mediocre everything else. The 144Hz AMOLED is exceptionally bright, the Dimensity 8500 Extreme delivers strong real-world performance, the 12GB/512GB UK model is generous, and the triple 50MP camera system includes a useful 3.5x periscope telephoto. IP68/IP69 protection and five years of security patches complete a package that feels carefully considered.

At £749.99, it is not an impulse purchase. But if you want a big-screen phone that can last through a demanding day — and often well beyond it — without giving up premium extras, the Motorola Edge 70 Pro+ is a superb value-led alternative to a full flagship. This is the battery beast to buy if you would rather spend your day using your phone than negotiating with its charger.