This mid-ranger is equipped with a 120Hz LTPO display, a telephoto camera, fast wired charging and extended support. While not tiny, it's smaller than most Androids.
They might deliver on the base promise but the other point is that Motorola is extremely unreliable with regards to the frequency of their updates. The OS update will come a year after a Pixel or Samsung and around the launch of a new version. See the razr 40 series, which has only recently received Android 14 (released October 2023), right before the release of Android 15. You could maybe argue that is to be expected for a smaller player in the market but the same applies to security patches, which are all over the place and often several months out of date. Even if Motorola hasn’t actually abandoned a phone, it can sometimes feel like it for the owner because you just never know when they are going to push something (if ever).
They might deliver on the base promise but the other point is that Motorola is extremely unreliable with regards to the frequency of their updates. The OS update will come a year after a Pixel or Samsung and around the launch of a new version. See the razr 40 series, which has only recently received Android 14 (released October 2023), right before the release of Android 15. You could maybe argue that is to be expected for a smaller player in the market but the same applies to security patches, which are all over the place and often several months out of date. Even if Motorola hasn’t actually abandoned a phone, it can sometimes feel like it for the owner because you just never know when they are going to push something (if ever).
Or the ever classic: launch one version behind the current Android version. Provide security update once a year and then taut that it’s aon OS update.