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Motorola Razr 60

  • Marcella Frattari
  • 5 days ago
  • 14 min read

Updated: 6 hours ago

SMARTPHONE TIER: FLAGSHIP/PRO TIER

Battery Capacity mAh: 4500



Motorola Razr 60:  fun, functional, and refreshingly uncomplicated

SMARTPHONE BATTERY PERFORMANCE


Based on Price: Flagship/Pro Tier (€700+)


Mid Tier Ranking #9


Graphic of the Motorola Razr 60 Smartphone

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The Motorola Razr 60 represents the brand’s confident return to the foldable mainstream. It’s not a bleeding-edge flagship like its Ultra sibling, but rather a refined, well-balanced clamshell that aims to bring the flip-phone experience to a broader audience, combining modern hardware, a playful design, and sensible pricing. It doesn’t try to break records or redefine the category; instead, it focuses on making the flip format genuinely practical day to day.


Motorola leans on what it does best: design that feels distinct without screaming for attention. The Razr 60 inherits the silhouette of its predecessors — compact when folded, tall and slim when open — while introducing softer edges and new Pantone-certified colours. The finish is smooth and tactile, with a nylon-inspired back that’s easy to grip and resists fingerprints. The stainless-steel hinge feels sturdy and reassuring, opening with a satisfying snap and staying firmly in place at intermediate angles.


At 188 g and 15.9 mm thick when closed, it’s slightly heavier than a traditional smartphone but remains pocket-friendly. There’s no IP68 rating like on some slab phones, but Motorola has added IP48 protection, meaning it can withstand dust and the occasional splash without worry. It’s solidly built, with no creaks or flex, giving off a reassuring sense of precision engineering.


The Razr 60 uses a dual-screen setup that makes the flip concept more than just nostalgic flair. Inside is a 6.9-inch LTPO pOLED panel with Full HD+ resolution (2640 × 1080) and a 120 Hz refresh rate. It’s crisp, bright, and vibrant, with a peak brightness around 3000 nits, more than enough for outdoor visibility. Colours are rich but well balanced, and the crease is barely noticeable in regular use.


The outer 3.6-inch pOLED display isn’t as expansive as the Ultra’s 4-inch panel, but it’s perfectly functional for quick interactions, checking notifications, controlling music, replying to messages, or even watching short videos. Both screens are protected by Gorilla Glass Victus, and the stereo speakers with Dolby Atmos deliver surprisingly full sound for such a compact phone.


Under the hood, Motorola opts for the MediaTek Dimensity 7400X (4 nm). A capable, energy-efficient midrange 5G chipset paired with 8 or 12 GB of RAM and up to 512 GB of storage (UFS 2.2). It’s not a powerhouse, but for everyday tasks like browsing, messaging, streaming, or multitasking, it feels smooth and responsive. The interface runs close to stock Android, free of bloat and unnecessary animations.


Where the hardware starts to show its limits is in demanding gaming or sustained workloads. Titles like Honkai Star Rail tend to stutter at higher settings, and the phone can warm up under load, something several reviewers have noted. Still, performance remains consistent for casual use, and Motorola’s thermal management keeps it from overheating in normal scenarios.


Running Android 15 with My UX, the Razr 60 maintains Motorola’s signature clean, user-friendly identity. It includes trademark gestures like the double-twist to open the camera or the chop motion to toggle the flashlight, and now adds Moto AI features such as automatic photo optimization, adaptive stabilization for video, and contextual suggestions that anticipate your next move.


The only real disappointment is software longevity. Motorola promises three major Android updates and four years of security patches — decent, but well below Samsung’s seven-year commitment for its latest Flip series. That’s the main trade-off for its lower price.


Motorola equips the Razr 60 with a 50 MP main sensor (f/1.7, OIS), a 13 MP ultra-wide/macro, and a 32 MP front camera. It’s a flexible and well-rounded setup that captures bright, detailed shots with accurate colours and solid dynamic range. The OIS helps keep handheld video steady, and the flip form factor allows creative angles or a “camcorder mode” by folding the phone halfway.


Low-light performance is decent but not class-leading. The smaller sensor and midrange image processing mean detail softens in darker environments, and there’s no dedicated telephoto zoom. Still, for social media, travel photography, and casual use, it performs above expectations at this price point.


Despite its slim frame, the Razr 60 houses a 4,500 mAh silicon–carbon battery. Charging is handled by 30 W TurboPower and 15 W wireless charging, refilling the battery from empty in around 70–80 minutes. Energy efficiency is good for its class, though Samsung’s Snapdragon-based rivals remain slightly more optimised under heavy loads.


It’s not flawless, the Dimensity 7400X still trails Qualcomm’s latest chips in raw power and efficiency, and Motorola’s shorter update window may concern long-term users. But judged on its own terms, the Razr 60 is one of the most appealing foldables for the price: fun, functional, and refreshingly uncomplicated.




Pros

Cons

  • Distinctive, premium foldable design with Pantone-certified colour finishes

  • MediaTek Dimensity 7400X trails Snapdragon rivals in efficiency and sustained performance

  • Compact, pocket-friendly form factor with solid stainless-steel hinge


  • Noticeable heat build-up during long gaming sessions

  • IP48 water and dust resistance — better than most midrange foldables

  • 188 g weight and 15.9 mm folded thickness may feel chunky to some users

  • Bright 6.9-inch LTPO pOLED display (3000 nits, 120 Hz) with vibrant colour accuracy

  • Outer display smaller than the Razr 60 Ultra’s 4-inch panel

  • Functional 3.6-inch external AMOLED screen for apps, notifications, and selfies

  • Only three years of OS updates and four of security patches — below industry leaders

  • Clean, near-stock Android 15 interface with classic Motorola gestures

  • No expandable storage (UFS 2.2 only)

  • Useful Moto AI tools: photo enhancement, adaptive video stabilization, contextual prompts

  • Ultra-wide lens weaker in low light with visible noise and softness

  • 50 MP main camera with OIS delivers crisp daylight shots and smooth video

  • Limited camera versatility. No telephoto lens, and night shots lose detail

  • Decent overall photo performance with versatile 13 MP ultra-wide/macro lens

  • Battery efficiency under heavy load slightly below Samsung’s Flip 6

  • 4,500 mAh silicon–carbon battery offers roughly 1.5 days of real-world use

  • The Motorola Razr 60 does not include a 3.5 mm headphone jack

  • Durable materials (Victus glass, metal frame, reinforced hinge)


  • 30 W wired and 15 W wireless charging support


  • Balanced stereo speakers with Dolby Atmos soundstage




 ViserMark Labels for the Motorola Razr 60


Please take a look at the following information about the battery performance of the Motorola Razr 60 :

ViserMark Labels for the Motorola Moto Razr 60 smartphone

Battery Life: The Motorola Razr 60 offers endurance that’s commendable for a compact foldable. In testing, it averaged around 41 hours of active use, translating to roughly a day and a half of real-world runtime for most users. Its 4,500 mAh silicon–carbon battery performs efficiently across everyday tasks like messaging, streaming, and social media, with moderate gaming or camera use rarely demanding a midday top-up.


Battery Charging: Motorola equips the Razr 60 with 30 W TurboPower wired charging and 15 W wireless support. A full recharge takes around 70–80 minutes, with the battery reaching 50 percent in roughly 35 minutes using Motorola’s compatible charger.


Battery Performance & Efficiency: The Razr 60 consumes approximately 3.6 kWh per year. Its efficiency rating of around 1.0 “leaf” reflects solid but not exceptional tuning. It’s optimised for typical daily use rather than sustained heavy workloads.




Specification Overview - Released Date: April 2025

  • Body & Build:

    • Dimensions: Unfolded: 171.3 × 74 × 7.3 mm | Folded: 88.1 × 74 × 15.9 mm

    • Weight: 188 g

    • Materials: Plastic front (unfolded), glass front (folded, Gorilla Glass Victus), silicone polymer eco-leather back, aluminium frame (6000 series), stainless-steel hinge

    • Durability: IP48 dust and water resistant (up to 1.5 m for 30 min, splash and dust protection)

  • Display:

    • Main Screen: 6.9 inches LTPO AMOLED, 1B colours, HDR10+, 120 Hz refresh rate

    • Resolution: 1080 × 2640 pixels (~413 ppi)

    • Brightness: Up to 3000 nits (peak)

    • Protection: Gorilla Glass Victus

    • Cover Display: 3.6 inches AMOLED, 90 Hz, HDR10+, 1056 × 1066 pixels (~413 ppi), 1700 nits (peak)

  • Operating System:

    • OS: Android 15

    • Interface: Motorola My UX with Moto Gestures and Moto AI enhancements

  • Chipset & Performance:

    • Processor: MediaTek Dimensity 7400X (4 nm)

    • CPU: Octa-core (4×2.6 GHz Cortex-A78 & 4×2.0 GHz Cortex-A55)

    • GPU: Mali-G615 MC2

  • Memory & Storage:

    • Configurations: 256 GB + 8 GB RAM / 256 GB + 12 GB RAM / 512 GB + 12 GB RAM

    • Storage Type: UFS 2.2

    • Expandable: No microSD slot

  • Connectivity & Features:

    • SIM: Dual SIM (Nano-SIM + eSIM or Dual Nano-SIM, region dependent)

    • 5G: Supported (Sub-6 GHz)

    • Wi-Fi: Wi-Fi 802.11 a/b/g/n/ac/6 or 6e (tri-band, region dependent)

    • Bluetooth: 5.4, A2DP, LE

    • NFC: Yes

    • USB: USB Type-C 2.0

    • Biometrics: Side-mounted fingerprint sensor

    • Sensors: Accelerometer, gyro, proximity, compass

  • Audio:

    • Speakers: Stereo speakers with Dolby Atmos

    • Headphone Jack: No 3.5 mm port

  • Camera System:

    • Rear Cameras:

      • 50 MP (f/1.7, 25 mm wide, 1/1.95", 0.8 µm, dual pixel PDAF, OIS)

      • 13 MP (f/2.2, 120˚ ultra-wide/macro, 1/3.0", 1.12 µm, AF)

    • Rear Features: Dual LED flash, HDR, panorama, Pantone Validated colour calibration

    • Rear Video: 4K@30fps, 1080p@30/60fps, gyro-EIS

    • Front Camera: 32 MP (f/2.4, 25 mm wide, 1/3.14", 0.7 µm, HDR)

    • Front Video: 4K@30fps, 1080p@30/60fps

  • Colours Available: Pantone Gibraltar Sea, Pantone Spring Bud, Pantone Lightest Sky.




Performance - HOW WE TEST


ViserMark offers a comprehensive range of battery performance test results based on different criteria and benchmarks for evaluating a smartphone's performance. Our tests are performed using the strictest protocol in a controlled environment to ensure repetition and consistency powered by SmartViser's test automation solution viSer.


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VWS Analytics Studio is a complementary product to the viSer Test Automation solution. It enhances the viSer user experience and is the fastest way to analyse and view smartphone test results.


We have used the interactive dashboard to show you the recent test results and translated them into ViserMark Labels.



Join our readers to receive the latest update to our smartphone battery performance scores and performance reviews as soon as we finish testing!

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Smartphone Battery Performance - FULL TEST RESULTS AND REVIEW


ViserMark has put the Motorola Razr 60 through our testing protocol, based on real smartphone usage from 100% battery level down to power off. This includes daily activities, such as calls, web, video and music streaming, gaming, social networks, picture and video capture, and standby. All activities are executed in a defined order and timeline.

 

These test results, show how the Motorola Razr 60 performed and the scores achieved.


1. Battery Performance


The Motorola Razr 60 achieved a battery performance score of 43/100, placing it nearly on par with both the Samsung Galaxy Z Flip 6 (44) and Samsung Galaxy Z Fold 6 (44), while outperforming the flagship average (41.6). This result confirms that Motorola’s latest clamshell can confidently stand beside pricier foldables in overall endurance, offering well-balanced longevity despite its compact 4,500 mAh battery.


A ViserMark Label for Battery Performance displaying 43/100 for the Motorola Razr 60

Charging is handled through 30 W wired TurboPower and 15 W wireless support. Motorola’s advertised “half-charge in around 35 minutes” holds true in real testing, with a full recharge taking roughly 70–80 minutes. While not class-leading, the dual-charging convenience (wired and wireless) adds everyday practicality. There’s no reverse-charging function, which keeps it aligned with most mid-range foldables rather than premium flagships.

A bar chart representing the battery score for the Motorola Razr 60 with other Flagship/Pro Tier Smartphones

Overall, the Razr 60 delivers dependable, well-tuned endurance with efficient standby consumption and balanced power draw. It won’t dethrone Samsung’s latest Flip in sheer optimisation, but it’s a strong showing that demonstrates Motorola’s progress in battery engineering, a foldable that performs consistently without demanding constant recharges.

2. Battery Life


In ViserMark’s battery life testing, the Motorola Razr 60 achieved 41 hours of active usage, equivalent to roughly 1.5 days of typical real-world use. This places it slightly ahead of the Samsung Galaxy Z Flip 6 (38 hours), nearly matching the Galaxy Z Fold 6  (43 hours), and comfortably above the flagship average (40.5 hours). For a compact clamshell foldable, this is a strong showing, proof that Motorola’s efficiency tuning and silicon-carbon battery chemistry pay off in everyday scenarios.

A ViserMark Label displaying 1.5 days of use and 41 hours of use for the Motorola Razr 60 smartphone

The phone’s stamina stems from its 4,500 mAh cell paired with the MediaTek Dimensity 7400X chipset. While it handles light workloads like messaging, streaming, and browsing efficiently, power draw increases under heavier conditions such as gaming or extended camera use, consistent with most MediaTek foldables. Even so, the Razr 60 maintains dependable all-day performance without anxiety about mid-day top-ups.

A bar chart representing the battery life in Days of Use for the Motorola Razr 60 with other Flagship/Pro Tier Smartphones

A bar chart representing the battery life in Hours of Use for the Motorola Razr 60 with other Flagship/Pro Tier Smartphones

For most users, the Razr 60 easily covers a full day plus a comfortable buffer into the next, putting it on par with Samsung’s foldables and just shy of the best endurance performers in the premium category. While it doesn’t quite hit two-day territory, Motorola’s latest flip remains a reliable travel and daily companion with well-balanced battery management.





3. Battery Consumption


Based on ViserMark’s measured current consumption data, the Motorola Razr 60 demonstrates notably lower power draw across nearly all major usage categories compared with the Samsung Galaxy Z Fold 6, reflecting stronger overall optimisation for everyday efficiency.


The Razr 60 consumes roughly half the current of the Fold 6 during social media and outgoing call scenarios, suggesting Motorola’s firmware and display tuning are better calibrated for light, continuous workloads. Similar gains are seen in gaming, downloads/uploads, YouTube, Media Player and Web browsing where the Razr maintains nearly identical visual endurance despite a smaller internal battery.

A Bar Chart representing the battery consumption of the Motorola Razr 60 with the Samsung Galaxy Z Fold 6

The only areas where the Galaxy Z Fold 6 performs more efficiently are camera usage and replay. These gaps suggest that Samsung’s image processing pipeline and multimedia handling are slightly better optimised for intensive visual tasks, possibly due to Qualcomm’s more mature power scaling under high-performance loads.


Even so, across the broader test suite, the Razr 60 maintains a clear advantage in sustained, real-world efficiency, delivering competitive endurance despite its smaller battery capacity.



When comparing the Motorola Razr 60 with the Samsung Galaxy Z Flip 6, the data reveals two premium clamshell foldables with similar design philosophies but subtly different energy profiles. Despite both featuring comparable battery capacities (4,500 mAh for the Razr 60 vs 4,000 mAh for the Flip 6), their optimisation approaches diverge noticeably.

A Bar Chart representing the battery consumption of the Motorola Razr 60 with the Samsung Galaxy Z Flip 6

The Razr 60 demonstrates greater efficiency across most everyday scenarios, including social media, outgoing calls, gaming, downloads/uploads, media playback, and web browsing. These results show Motorola’s superior optimisation for continuous, screen-on workloads such as messaging, streaming, and casual gaming, where it consistently draws less power than Samsung’s Snapdragon-based Flip 6.


The Galaxy Z Flip 6, on the other hand, proves more efficient in camera, YouTube, and replay tests. This demonstrates Samsung’s superior optimisation for image processing, video playback, and post-capture handling, where its Snapdragon hardware and software integration achieve lower power draw under visually intensive workloads.


Overall, the Motorola Razr 60 stands out as the more energy-conscious foldable for everyday use — efficient across communication, browsing, and entertainment — and its slightly larger 4,500 mAh battery further extends its practical endurance. Meanwhile, the Galaxy Z Flip 6 remains better tuned for heavy content creation, offering leaner power use where performance and visual output take priority.





When comparing battery efficiency across the Motorola Razr 60, Samsung Galaxy Z Flip 6, Samsung Galaxy Z Fold 6, and the Flagship/Pro Tier average, clear differences emerge in how each device manages power across real-world use cases.

A Bar Chart representing the battery consumption of the Motorola Razr 60 Comparison

The Motorola Razr 60 demonstrates one of the most balanced and efficient profiles in its class. It consumes less power than both Samsung foldables in the majority of daily tasks — notably social media, outgoing calls, gaming, downloads/uploads, media playback, and web browsing — suggesting Motorola’s optimisation focuses on steady endurance and efficient handling of screen-on activities.


By contrast, the Galaxy Z Flip 6 and Z Fold 6 show higher current draw, particularly in social media and outgoing calls, where their power-hungry Snapdragon chips contribute to steeper consumption peaks. The Fold 6 does perform better in camera, YouTube, and replay tasks, where Samsung’s integrated image pipeline and multimedia tuning deliver better energy management during heavy visual workloads.


Compared to the Flagship/Pro Tier average, the Razr 60 sits comfortably competitive. Its results point to a refined software–hardware balance, achieving solid endurance despite its compact flip form factor.


4. Battery Efficiency


In ViserMark’s battery efficiency evaluation, the Motorola Razr 60 achieved a 1 leaf rating, placing it level with the Samsung Galaxy Z Fold 6 but below the Galaxy Z Flip 6 (1.5 leaves) and the flagship average of 0.98 leaves. This suggests that while the Razr 60 delivers strong endurance for its compact size, it isn’t among the most finely optimised foldables when it comes to power management.

A ViserMark Label for battery efficiency displaying 0,5 leaf out of 5 leaves for the Motorola Razr 60

A bar chart displaying the battery efficiency for the Motorola Razr 60 with other Flagship/ Pro Tier smartphones

The result reflects a tuning strategy that prioritises consistent, real-world stability over aggressive energy saving. Motorola’s optimisation avoids erratic power draw or throttling under load, but it doesn’t match Samsung’s efficiency gains in sustained tasks such as gaming or video playback. Still, the Razr 60 balances performance and endurance well, offering reliable battery behaviour across daily workloads rather than chasing benchmark efficiency figures.


5. Annual Energy Consumption


According to ViserMark’s annual energy testing, the Motorola Razr 60 consumes approximately 3.6 kWh per year, placing it slightly above the Samsung Galaxy Z Flip 6 (3.4 kWh) and Galaxy Z Fold 6 (3.3 kWh), yet still below the flagship average of 3.79 kWh. This positions the Razr 60 in the upper-middle range for foldable energy efficiency, solid, though not class-leading.

A ViserMark Label for annual energy consumption for the Motorola Razr 60

This result underscores Motorola’s approach of prioritising balanced performance and steady endurance over extreme energy optimisation. The Razr 60 draws marginally more power than Samsung’s best-tuned foldables, but its consumption remains well-controlled considering the dual-display setup and compact form factor.

A bar chart displaying the annual energy consumption for the Motorola Razr 60 with other Flagship/ Pro Tier smartphones

For everyday users, this translates into a dependable all-day experience with only a modest sustainability trade-off. While the Razr 60 isn’t the most frugal clamshell on the market, it offers reliable efficiency and endurance harmony, proving that Motorola’s engineering choices strike a practical middle ground between power and performance.



Who Should Buy the Motorola Razr 60 ?


The Motorola Razr 60 is best suited for users who want the foldable experience without the flagship price tag. People who value design, practicality, and everyday performance more than sheer technical muscle. It’s a phone made for those who appreciate innovation in form, not just in specs, and who see the flip design as a lifestyle choice rather than a novelty.


With its refined clamshell build, Pantone-certified finishes, and stainless-steel hinge, the Razr 60 appeals to design-conscious users who want something compact, stylish, and distinct from the sea of slab phones. It’s ideal for urban professionals, trendsetters, and casual tech enthusiasts who want a modern device that feels premium but isn’t over-engineered.


The 6.9-inch LTPO AMOLED inner display and 3.6-inch cover screen make it practical in daily life, perfect for quick checks, navigation, selfies, or calls without unfolding. Meanwhile, the 4,500 mAh silicon–carbon battery offers reliable all-day use, easily lasting 1.5 days for moderate users, and the combination of 30W wired and 15W wireless charging ensures flexible top-ups at home or on the go.


Performance from the MediaTek Dimensity 7400X and up to 12 GB RAM keeps things smooth for social apps, multitasking, and entertainment, while the clean Android 15 experience and Moto gestures (chop for flashlight, twist for camera) maintain Motorola’s signature simplicity. It’s also a strong fit for users who prefer a minimal, near-stock Android experience without bloatware or intrusive skins.


That said, the Razr 60 isn’t built for everyone. Power users and heavy gamers may find its MediaTek chipset less capable under stress, and photographers looking for flagship-grade low-light performance or telephoto versatility will need to look higher up the range. Its software support window (three OS updates, four years of security patches) is shorter than Samsung’s, and there’s no expandable storage or headphone jack.


In short, the Motorola Razr 60 is for people who want style, practicality, and personality in one foldable, a well-balanced daily driver that brings the flip form factor to a wider audience. It’s not for spec-chasers or hardcore users, but for anyone who values design elegance, functional innovation, and solid all-round performance, it’s one of the most appealing foldables in its class.


ViserMark VERDICT


The Motorola Razr 60 doesn’t chase flagship dominance, it focuses on delivering what most people actually want in a foldable: a stylish, practical design, smooth performance, and dependable battery life without the Ultra-tier price.


Its clamshell build feels sturdy and premium, with Pantone-certified finishes, a reinforced stainless-steel hinge, and IP48 protection offering reassurance against everyday wear. The design strikes the right balance between playful and functional, giving the flip format genuine everyday usability.


The 6.9-inch LTPO AMOLED inner screen is sharp, bright, and fluid at 120Hz, while the 3.6-inch external display makes quick replies, calls, and selfies effortless. Together, they make the Razr 60 practical beyond its nostalgic appeal.


Performance from the Dimensity 7400X is smooth for daily tasks, social media, and multitasking, though it’s not a powerhouse, gaming and sustained workloads will reveal its limits. The 50 MP main camera with OIS and 13 MP ultra-wide deliver bright, accurate shots in good light, but night and zoom performance remain average.


The 4,500 mAh battery is another highlight, easily lasting a day and a half of mixed use, with 30W wired and 15W wireless charging keeping it flexible. Motorola’s My UX on Android 15 remains clean, fast, and free of bloat, with signature gestures that make everyday use intuitive.


The Razr 60 isn’t built for power users or camera enthusiasts, it’s for those who want style, simplicity, and practicality in a modern foldable. Confident, compact, and reliable, it proves that you don’t need an Ultra price tag to enjoy the flip experience done right.


VCX (Valued Camera eXperience)


The VCX Forum has been working with its members on the system and infrastructure as a non-profit organisation. We strive to improve our technology to develop and exchange accurate and objective quality and performance indicators, which is our ultimate goal. We will also serve as a compass for the smartphone camera industry. We appreciate your interest in the VCX Forum.


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Background


Motorola is a well-established and innovative technology company known for its contributions to the telecommunications industry. Founded in 1928, Motorola has a rich history of pioneering achievements, including the development of the first handheld mobile phone. Today, the company continues to produce a wide range of consumer electronics, with a focus on smartphones that offer reliable performance, innovative features, and value for money. Motorola's smartphones are known for their durability, user-friendly interfaces, and strong battery life, making them a popular choice for consumers worldwide.


Written by


Profile image of Marcella Frattari

Marcella Frattari is the Communication Marketing and Lead Generation Manager at SmartViser, playing a key role in shaping the company's communication and marketing strategies. With a background in journalism and a passion for digital communication, Marcella focuses on improving SmartViser's overall online presence and engagement. Her dedication to clear, effective communication and creative content makes her a valuable asset to the team.


Press Contact

Marcella Frattari: Contact@visermark.com


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