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It’s cheaper and better looking than an iPhone, but there are drawbacks

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What is the Motorola Signature?

Motorola has long made some of the most dependable budget smartphones on the market, but recent years have seen it showing signs of greater ambition. The Motorola Signature isn’t so much a new flagship phone as it is a rebranding of the Motorola Edge Ultra line, with a slimmed-down body.

It offers broadly high-end specifications in a distinctively styled, slim body, but with a slightly lower price tag than many rivals. Its starting price of £899.99 undercuts the iPhone Air by £100 – more if you factor in the 512GB of storage that comes as standard.

If Apple’s skinny phone appeals to you for its combination of a svelte form factor and flagship performance, but it feels a little pricey, the Motorola Signature is a worthwhile alternative.

I used the Motorola Signature every day for a week, making calls, sending messages, watching videos, taking pictures and playing games. I check things like performance and battery life. I also ran some popular benchmark tests, which placed definitive numbers on the phone’s CPU (central processing unit) and GPU (graphics processing unit) output to compare with rivals.

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I captured more than 100 photographs across its four cameras, from night time street photography to day time urban shots and close-up portraits.

I have used most of the Motorola Signature’s key rivals, so I was able to make like-for-like comparisons. I previously tested the phone’s predecessor, the Motorola Edge 50 Ultra, so was able to judge how much Motorola had managed to refine its flagship formula in the two years (give or take) since the latter phone was released.

Score: 4.5/5

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