On Thursday, Motorola dramatically unveiled a new 2015 Moto X model, the Moto X Force, that Motorola says sports a shatterproof display. Not crack-resistant or "tough as nails," but shatterproof. And the company is backing up the claim with a four-year replacement guarantee.

The announcement, and Motorola's bold boast about the screen, came in the form of an entertainingly over-the-top video demonstration, which Motorola dubbed the #ShortestPressAnnouncementEver.

Quite impressive. Of course, if you're aware of Motorola and Verizon's unveiling of the Droid Turbo 2 on Wednesday, which officially introduced "Moto ShatterShield" display technology, this is all very familiar. That's because, as The Verge put it, the Moto X Force is essentially the international, unlocked version of the Droid Turbo 2, stripped of Verizon's bloatware and brand.

Motorola has set a release date window in mid-November for the Moto X Force in the U.K., Europe, Asia, and Latin America. There are no plans to sell the device in the U.S.

In the U.K., pricing is set at £499 for the 32GB storage model and £534 for the 64GB variant, with the usual Moto Maker extras costing a bit more. That works out to about $764 and $817 unlocked, respectively, which is in the same price range as premium flagship phones from rivals like Samsung and Apple.

(Photo : Motorola Blog)

And the Moto X Force is built like a flagship device. Besides the five layer ShatterShield display, a Motorola-only feature "designed to absorb shock and guaranteed not to crack or shatter," according to the company, the Moto X Force (and therefore the Droid Turbo 2) rocks some serious hardware.

Here's a rundown of the major specs:

  •  64-bit octa-core Qualcomm Snapdragon 810 @ 2.0GHz with Adreno 430 GPU, 3GB RAM, and the "Moto Voice" natural language processor baked in.
  •  5.4-inch AMOLED ShatterShield Display with Quad HD (2560 x 1440p) resolution, 540 pixels per inch
  •  32GB or 64GB internal storage, microSD expansion up to 2TB (though 200GB cards are the largest that exist so far)
  •  21-megapixel rear camera with phase detection autofocus, auto-HDR, 4K video capture @30fps, and dual-LED flash
  •  5-megapixel wide-angle, front-facing camera with dedicated LED flash and 1.4um pixel size for low light
  •  3760mAh battery with TurboPower charging (13 hours in 15 minutes), Qi and PMA wireless charging support, rated up to 48 hours of mixed usage
  •  802.11 a/b/g/n/ac WiFi with 2.4GHz + 5GHz MIMO, Bluetooth 4.1 LE, GPS, and NFC
  •  Support for HMTS / HPSA+, GSM/EDGE networks and 4G LTE bands: B1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 7, 8, 12, 17, 20, 25, 28, 40
  •  Android 5.1.1 Lollipop, upgradeable to Android 6.0 Marshmallow

It's interesting to note that the Moto X Force is just one LTE band away from the Moto X (Style) Pure Edition's "universal LTE banding." And its wide range supported network types may leave a chance open that the Moto X Force could work on some GSM-based U.S. networks, though probably not as smoothly and trouble-free as if it were designed for it. Stay with LatinPostTech for updates on that.

The only missed opportunity with the Moto X Force is that, while it has a water-resistant nanocoating like the Moto X Style, Motorola could have really made the device accident-proof if it had given the Force the same waterproof design that comes with the third-generation Moto G. That (cheaper) device's IP67 waterproofing is rated for up to 30 minutes in three feet of water.

If the Moto X Force had that, you could not only repeatedly drop the phone on a concrete surface without consequence -- you could drop it, bank it off a curb and into a puddle, all (probably) without ruining your day.