The results from the 50-megapixel main camera are often pretty good, but the Edge+ can struggle with high-contrast scenes. Sky too bright? The rest of the photo will look like an oil painting. Colors are sometimes off too—skies can be odd hues of blue. Detail and sharpness usually just aren't as good as you'll find on competitors like the Google Pixel 6 Pro. The 50-MP ultrawide is pretty decent, but it struggles in some of the same ways.
There's an Ultra-Res mode you can use to snap 50-megapixel photos (by default, the images are pixel binned to 12 megapixels so they can take in more light and produce brighter photos), but the quality in this mode is at times awfully fuzzy, not at all what I'd call “Ultra-Res.”
Thankfully, that depth camera is put to good use, as Portrait images do deliver accurate blur effects. But this is impaired by skin tones coming out a bit too red, or poor detail when scenes are darker. That's where this camera system really starts to fail. Even with Motorola's Night Vision mode, low-light images are often too dim, with shoddy details and muddy colors. They're fine, just not what you should expect out of a $1,000 phone.
The camera system isn't the only issue. Motorola rates the water resistance for this phone at IP52, which covers it from rain, but not a full dunk in the pool. IP67, the rating that says the device can survive underwater at a certain depth for a brief time, has been the standard on every flagship phone for years. I've no clue why the Edge+ 2022 doesn't offer that peace of mind.
The 5G is also confusing here. The only way to access millimeter-wave (mmWave) 5G speeds (the fastest kind of 5G) is on the Verizon-exclusive Motorola Edge+ 5G UW model. The unlocked version will only be able to access sub-6 5G (the slower but more accessible kind) on T-Mobile and Verizon, with AT&T to come at a later date (it will rely on 4G LTE if you're on AT&T). This is weird. Most high-end phones come with robust 5G coverage out of the gate. Sure, the number of times you use mmWave will be small, but at least it's there. Not so on the Edge+.