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  • The Motorola Razr Plus was put through YouTuber Zack Nelson’s famous durability test.
  • It survived dust exposure even with an unimpressive IP rating.
  • However, the bend test showed a peculiar weakness in the phone.

I have an almost two-year-old toddler who loves to flip open books. But she’ll often bend them in the opposite direction, breaking the binding and tearing the pages. After watching this JerryRigEverything durability test for the Razr Plus, I am pretty confident my child can break Motorola’s flagship foldable.

YouTuber Zack Nelson’s famous smartphone torture regimen begins by trying to scratch the display of the Razr Plus. The internal 6.9-inch display is covered with a screen protector, which scratches at level two of the Mohs hardness scale. Deeper grooves appear on the display at level three. Since you can’t remove the screen protector, you can end up with a damaged surface, even with fingernail scratches.