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Clicks Keyboard for Motorola Razr Turns a Foldable Into a Modern BlackBerry, With Connection Issues

Clicks Keyboard is a $139 physical keyboard case for Motorola Razr 2024-2025 with backlit BlackBerry-style keys. Compatible with Razr base, Plus, and Ultra.

Clicks Keyboard for Motorola Razr Turns a Foldable Into a Modern BlackBerry, With Connection Issues

What it is

The Clicks Keyboard for Motorola Razr is a physical keyboard accessory case that adds a BlackBerry-style Q10 layout to Motorola Razr foldable phones. It fits the Motorola Razr 2024, Razr Plus 2024, Razr 2025 base, Razr Plus 2025, and Razr Ultra 2025 (Razr 60 in some markets). The case connects via USB-C passthrough and adds roughly 1 inch of length below the phone's folded form. Keys are backlit for low-light typing, the layout includes a standard QWERTY with modifier keys (no dedicated number row, numbers require shift-key combinations), and the case is made of plastic with a matte finish.

Pricing: $139 at Clicks direct and Best Buy.

What's interesting

The BlackBerry revival is the product thesis. For users who miss physical keyboards and have been using a Motorola Razr foldable (or thinking about one), the Clicks case delivers genuine physical-key typing for messaging, email, and chat apps. Android Central's hands-on confirmed the keys have proper tactile response and backlighting, closer to a modern gaming keyboard feel than a BlackBerry Q10's original chiclet keys.

Multi-phone compatibility across 5 Razr models is the engineering win. Most keyboard accessories target a single phone model. Clicks designed adapter hardware that works across the Razr 2024, Plus, 2025 variants, and Ultra, meaning a buyer who upgrades phones yearly can keep the same keyboard.

Backlit keys for night typing address the main practical failure mode of physical-keyboard accessories. For users typing in bed or in low-light environments, visible keys matter more than the tactile feedback itself. Sypnotix called out backlighting quality as a genuine positive.

Clicks has also announced Pixel and Samsung Galaxy variants of the keyboard case, suggesting the BlackBerry-style form factor has broader market interest than just Motorola Razr owners.

The design pairs well with the Razr's unique clamshell foldable form factor, when the phone is folded, the keyboard becomes part of a compact typing experience; when unfolded, the keyboard sits below the open phone like a laptop.

What's missing or unverified

Leaf&Core's review titled "A Bygone Era Returned, Poorly", the critical take is that connection reliability has not been solved despite multiple firmware updates. Some users report the keyboard losing USB-C connection intermittently, forcing a case reseat to restore typing.

No number row is a real usability issue. Touch-typists accustomed to dedicated numbers have to shift-key into them, which slows data entry for phone numbers, passwords with digits, and numeric-heavy messaging. For power users, this is a meaningful friction point.

$139 is premium pricing for a keyboard accessory. For BlackBerry nostalgia specifically, the BlackBerry Key2 used at $50-$80 is a cheaper alternative, though it's a full phone rather than an accessory.

The Razr form factor plus Clicks case adds significant bulk. Users who chose the Razr specifically for its compact folded profile lose that advantage when the keyboard case is attached.

Software keyboard on modern Android has improved substantially. For most typing volumes, Samsung Keyboard or Google's Gboard is fast enough that the physical keyboard premium is only justified for specific power-user workflows (long-form email, IRC/Slack-heavy chat).

Who it's for

BlackBerry enthusiasts who miss physical keyboards and are willing to pair them with modern Android. Motorola Razr owners who do heavy text typing (email, IRC, Discord, Slack) on mobile and want reduced typing errors. Content creators who need fast mobile composition for social media.

Not for: casual texters (Gboard is faster for most), users who demand reliable connections (current firmware has intermittent issues), or buyers who prioritize phone thinness.

Verdict

The Clicks Keyboard for Motorola Razr at $139 is a niche accessory that delivers on BlackBerry nostalgia with real functional caveats. Backlit keys and multi-Razr-model compatibility are genuine engineering wins; connection reliability and missing number row are real compromises. Against Gboard on a Razr alone (free) and BlackBerry Key2 used at $50-$80, Clicks wins on modern Android integration and pairing with the latest Razr generation; it loses on reliability and price. For the specific nostalgia-driven buyer, this is the right accessory.

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HOW THIS ARTICLE WAS MADE

This article was written by Dev, ProDrop’s Builder desk. It was fact-checked with a confidence score of 90%.

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