The smartphone industry rarely surprises anymore, but every so often, a leak slips through that feels genuinely refreshing. While headlines in recent weeks have been dominated by Samsung’s Galaxy S26 Ultra rumors and Apple’s whispers around a featherweight iPhone Air, another brand has been quietly preparing something intriguing. 
Motorola, a company that has already reestablished itself as a durability champion, may soon shift the conversation with its upcoming Edge 70 series.
Let’s start with the obvious: the Galaxy S26 Ultra chatter has left many fans deflated. Higher price tags, possible Exynos processors, and battery sizes that barely move the needle don’t exactly scream innovation. Similarly, the Galaxy S26 Edge leaks suggest a modest redesign but nothing transformative. Even OnePlus has had its fair share of skeptics about the 15’s rumored refresh. Against this backdrop of incrementalism, Motorola’s Edge 70 feels like a welcome curveball.
Why the Edge 70 matters
At first glance, you might ask: why should anyone be excited about a mid-ranger? But Motorola has a track record of pulling off feats its bigger rivals can’t seem to manage. The Edge 60, for example, came in at just 7.9mm thick yet housed a robust 5,200mAh battery. That balance between slimness and endurance is rare, and it sets expectations high for the Edge 70. If Motorola can shave the profile down to under 7.5mm while keeping battery life at 5,000mAh or higher, it could outclass devices marketed as ultra-thin without sacrificing usability.
The comparisons naturally point toward Apple’s iPhone Air, rumored to be razor-thin but with typical Apple compromises on battery size, and Samsung’s Galaxy S26 Edge, expected to keep to the company’s conservative power approach. If Motorola pushes forward with a phone that’s both slender and long-lasting, it would immediately carve out a unique niche.
Charging speeds and endurance
Another area where Motorola is likely to flex is charging. The Edge 60 supported 68W charging speeds – already ahead of much of the competition. For the Edge 70, speculation hints at the possibility of reaching or surpassing the 100W mark. If true, this would leave Samsung scrambling, given that even the Ultra model is rumored to only manage 60W. For users who value speed and convenience, Motorola could emerge as the go-to option for keeping devices topped up with minimal downtime.
It’s also worth noting that Motorola has long experimented with endurance-focused models. The Moto G86 Power, with its massive 6,720mAh battery packed into a sub-9mm body, proves that the brand knows how to maximize both form and function. This gives weight to the speculation that the Edge 70 could offer a near-perfect balance of portability and longevity.
Durability: the silent strength
Motorola’s “incredibly tough” marketing taglines shouldn’t be brushed off as empty hype. The company already equips many of its handsets with IP69 and MIL-STD-810H certifications, going beyond the IP68 baseline that most flagship rivals tout. In practice, this means Motorola phones withstand not just water and dust but also extreme temperature shifts, vibration, and accidental drops better than many others. If the Edge 70 doubles down on this durability while remaining sleek, it could appeal strongly to users tired of babying fragile glass slabs.
One phone, many siblings
The leaked promotional material suggests that the Edge 70 will be marketed as “impossibly thin and incredibly tough.” But more importantly, it is only one piece of the broader Edge 70 family puzzle. Motorola has historically rolled out Pro, Fusion, and Ultra variants alongside its mainline Edge devices. If the standard model looks promising, there’s every reason to expect that its siblings will push boundaries even further – whether in camera prowess, battery innovation, or even slimmer builds.
What we don’t know
Of course, speculation still outweighs facts. The processor remains a mystery, with no clarity on whether Motorola will rely on Qualcomm’s latest Snapdragon or explore other silicon. Pricing, release timelines, and regional availability are equally unclear. These uncertainties place the Edge 70 in the same rumor-laden camp as Samsung’s upcoming flagships. But that also underscores the point: for once, a mid-tier Motorola device is competing for attention in the same speculative buzz space as Apple and Samsung’s crown jewels.
A shift in perspective
Too often, conversations about the “next big phone” revolve around only two brands: Apple and Samsung. That narrow focus risks ignoring the innovation happening elsewhere. The Edge 70 series invites us to widen our view. Instead of waiting for incremental changes from the usual suspects, perhaps it’s time to consider that another company might step up and deliver what the iPhone Air or Galaxy S26 Edge won’t – a phone that blends thinness, endurance, durability, and charging efficiency in a way that feels genuinely new.
Will the Edge 70 be perfect? Almost certainly not. But in a market where the biggest names seem comfortable charging more for less, even the possibility that Motorola could outdo them in key areas is worth getting excited about. And if nothing else, it proves that thin phones can still be exciting – not because of their profile alone, but because of how much they manage to pack into it.
4 comments
since when are thin phones exciting? only if they dont suck in battery life
Moto phones underrated af, had one last years Edge and it was a beast 🔥
pls no exynos Moto, stick to Snapdragon or ppl wont even look
Apple fans will still buy the Air even if it dies by lunch break 😂