The Razr’s main camera has a 50MP sensor with an f/1.7 aperture. It features Pantone color, optical image stabilization (OIS), and phase-detection auto focus. The phone has a 13MP ultra-wide camera with an f/2.2 aperture that can capture macro images. These are joined by a 32MP f/2.4 selfie camera. The main and selfie cameras automatically bin the photos by a factor of four, so images come out at 12.5MP and 8MP, respectively. You can take full-resolution shots by using the camera’s Ultra-Res mode.
The photos I took with the Razr are uninspiring and peppered with unnaturally bright spots. Blues are brighter and greens are greener than they appear in real life.
Main camera (Credit: Sarah Lord)
The leaves at the bottom of the picture above are much brighter than they should be. Further, it’s difficult to distinguish individual branches of this tree, even when zoomed in.
The camera has three zoom levels. It accomplishes 2x zoom with digital cropping. Here’s a progression:
Ultra-wide camera, 0.5x zoom (Credit: Sarah Lord)
Main camera, 1x zoom (Credit: Sarah Lord)
Main camera, 2x zoom (Credit: Sarah Lord)
The grass is almost neon green, and the dandelions are a particularly bright shade of yellow.
Ultra-wide camera, macro (Credit: Sarah Lord)
Shots taken with the macro mode are filled with noise, especially around the edges of these flowers.
Selfie camera (Credit: Sarah Lord)
The selfie camera works as expected but isn’t particularly impressive.
Video capture maxes out at 4K30. The phone is capable of filming with 4x slow motion. Videos appear similar to the photos, with the best footage coming from the main camera. When it comes to flip phones, the Galaxy Z Flip 6, Razr+, and Razr Ultra all have better-performing cameras. Even for similarly priced slab phones, the Galaxy S25 and the Pixel 9a are much more impressive than the Razr.
The Razr comes with some of Google’s AI editing capabilities, including Magic Editor, which allows you to circle, brush, or tap an object in your photo to resize it or remove it. You also have access to Google Blur, which blurs the background of a photo, and Google Unblur, which can sharpen a blurry photo. Magic Eraser lets you get rid of unwanted elements in your snaps.