Motorola needs the Z2 Force to be this slim so the phone doesn't become unwieldy when you attach a Mod.
Among the Mods are a charging case and an external speaker. Buy those, though, and you’re paying extra to fix deficiencies caused by the needlessly thin design. It’s hard not to feel like Motorola built the Z2 Force with the idea of selling accessories in mind.
You can check out the full list of Moto Mods here. Few of them make much sense. Who wants to carry something extra around? Why buy an $80 speaker that works with only one phone when you could get a Bluetooth speaker that works with just about any phone? In what situation would you need a $300 mini-projector that can’t play anything in high definition?
Meanwhile, the $300 Hasselblad camera Mod has received middling reviews. The new game controller Mod is exclusive to Verizon. And I’m still not convinced that 360-degree cameras are something consumers actually want, let alone something they'll pay $300 to use when they work with only one phone.
The battery pack Mod makes some sense, but it doesn’t hold a lot of charge, and you can find lots of other external batteries that will work with any device, not just one of the Z models.
The least offensive option is probably a case that adds wireless charging. But other phones have wireless charging built-in; you don't have to buy a $40 accessory to get it.