The Motorola Droid X is excellent. It's also a little excessive. This Hummer humdinger of a phone delivers the absolute maximum in state-of-the-art Android power.
A phone that packs so much power is not hard to come by these days, but the Motorola Droid X offers more than the average bear.
With the HTC EVO 4G from Sprint and Apple iPhone 4 for AT&T on the loose, the smartphone race is running neck-and-neck. If you’re in the market for a high-end smartphone, the Motorola DROID X does deserve your attention.
Incredibly capable and dapper take on the multimedia phone. Standard battery endures a full day of regular web/video/phone use.
The Motorola Droid X makes another fine addition to Verizon's Android family, bringing with it a rich multimedia experience and more connectivity features.
Motorola’s supersized Droid has a gigantic display, excellent touch keyboard, and an impressive high-def camcorder with HDMI output.
The Droid X is a big, beautiful contender for the “best Android phone on the market” crown.
We enjoyed our time with the Motorola DROID X, and feel it is a well-balanced, powerful addition to Verizon Wireless’ Android lineup.
The Droid X is definitely one of the top smartphones coming out this summer. In features, design, and usability, it is right up there with the HTC EVO 4G and the iPhone 4.
The DROID X's display is nice (and huge), the multi-touch keyboards are the best available on Android today, and the phone shoots great HD video.
DROID X is an awesome superphone, and is a much needed form factor in the Verizon lineup.
With its superphone specifications, the Droid X represents the new bleeding-edge normal, and is the best Verizon Android phone yet.
All things considered, it's a showstopping phone whose potential is mutilated by ill-considered, ugly software that's poorly done.
It's not pretty like the iPhone. And it's huge. But due to its 8-megapixel camera and excellent video capture, you'll no longer have to bring out your Flip HD video cam saving you room in your purse or your pocket.
From a hardware perspective, this phone is pretty much a bang-on execution of what a high-end mobile powerhouse should be, but Motorola clearly still has work to do in order to play in the same software league as HTC does with Sense.