5 Minutes
At Lenovo Tech Day during CES 2026, Motorola didn’t just tease a new book-style foldable and a refreshed Signature line — it rolled out a slate of devices and AI projects aimed at fans, fitness buffs and early adopters. From a FIFA-branded Razr to a Polar-backed smartwatch and a unified AI assistant, here’s what caught our eye.
Limited-edition Razr 60: a phone for World Cup fans
Motorola announced the Razr 60 FIFA World Cup 26 Edition, a special clamshell foldable designed with soccer supporters in mind. The handset keeps the same core specs as the standard Razr 60 but adds a textured rear panel stamped with World Cup motifs, a green colorway, bespoke wallpapers, a FIFA-themed ringtone and a camera watermark for photos.
The company says the Razr 60 FIFA Edition will launch in the US and Canada on February 12, priced at $700 — a collectible option for fans who want their device to match the tournament spirit.

Fitness-first Moto Watch, built with Polar
Motorola’s new Moto Watch marks a deeper partnership with Polar for health and fitness tracking. The watch sports a 1.43-inch circular OLED protected by Gorilla Glass 3, a PPG heart-rate sensor, Bluetooth 5.3 and dual-frequency GPS for better location accuracy. It also carries an IP68 rating and supports continuous heart-rate monitoring, sleep insights and a variety of workout modes.

Available in aluminum finishes with a stainless-steel crown and Pantone-matched bands, the Moto Watch promises up to 13 days of battery life when the always-on display is disabled. Motorola plans a regional rollout across select markets in Asia, Europe, the Middle East, Latin America and Oceania with multiple band materials such as stainless steel, silicone and soft-luxe.

Sound Flow speaker and the new accessory lineup
For audio, Motorola introduced the Sound Flow portable speaker in collaboration with Bose. The speaker houses a 20W woofer, a 10W tweeter and dual passive radiators, and supports Bluetooth 5.0, Wi-Fi 5 and UWB. With an IP67 rating and a 6,000mAh battery, Motorola claims up to 12 hours of playback. The design uses a twill-textured fabric and comes in Pantone Carbon and Warm Taupe colorways, with capacitive touch controls on board.

The event also showcased the Moto Pen Ultra — a lightweight stylus with a 1.4mm tip, 4,096 levels of pressure sensitivity, Bluetooth 5.3, a 6-axis motion sensor and sub-5ms latency. It ships with a USB-C charging case, carries an IP55 rating and weighs roughly 4.7g.
Alongside the pen, Motorola refreshed its Tag offering. The Moto Tag 2 adds UWB and Bluetooth channel sounding, taps into the Find Hub network, and brings an IP68 rating plus a user-replaceable battery Motorola says can last up to 500 days. The Tag 2 also includes a multifunction button for locating paired devices or triggering a remote camera shutter.

Qira and Project Maxwell: how Motorola imagines AI on devices
Perhaps the most forward-looking announcements were software and prototypes. Motorola and Lenovo unveiled Qira, a cross-device AI assistant intended to unify moto AI, Lenovo AI Now, Creator Zone and Learning Zone under a single, context-aware platform. Qira works as a system-level assistant that can be summoned with the wake phrase "Hey, Qira," a hardware key or a persistent on-screen pill. Motorola says Qira will reach select Lenovo devices in Q1 2026, with Motorola device support arriving later.

Complementing Qira is Project Maxwell, a proof of concept from Motorola’s 312 Labs. Maxwell is a wearable accessory equipped with a camera and microphone that integrates with Qira to continuously analyze visual, audio and environmental signals. Using Multimodal Perception Fusion and Natural Language Interaction and Intention Capture, the prototype aims to deliver real-time, context-aware insights — essentially turning ambient data into proactive, helpful prompts.

Between hardware refreshes and AI experiments, Motorola’s CES appearances signal a push toward tighter integration between devices, sensors and software. Whether you’re after a fan-first Razr or curious about a cross-device AI that understands context, the company is betting on a mix of lifestyle products and machine intelligence to stand out in 2026.
Source: gsmarena
Comments
labcore
Sound Flow w/ Bose looks neat, but 12 hrs from a 6000mAh speaker? sounds optimistic. Maxwell is clever yet kinda scary, continuous camera = privacy mess
mechbyte
Wow a FIFA Razr? kinda wild. Qira sounds like sci fi, exciting but also kinda creepy if it's always listening... privacy pls, right?
Leave a Comment