I second basically everything 94lt1 said except for with regard to the Z3V. I didn't want that phone from the beginning for a couple of very key reasons. 1, I didn't like the feeling of the sharp edges against my hand when I held it. 2, I don't like the fact that it has a glass back and 3, I felt the buttons on the side are far too pronounced. As an aside from that, although it's waterproof and can take pictures underwater, I'm not a fan of the doors that must be opened and remain hanging by tethers to access the charging and audio ports. To me they're just another thing to break down the road.
I also contemplated the Nexus 6, but once I had one in my hand I realized it was too large for me to hold and use effectively the way I choose to. Don't get me wrong, it is a great phablet, but I don't feel it worked well for my needs since it's just simply too big. I think the turbo is just about as big as I would want to have. They could make the turbo screen larger if they didn't enlarge the chassis and I would be comfortable with that but otherwise the turbo is an awesome phone, fast, powerful, awesome screen, 64 gigabytes of RAM awesome again, just a great performer.
Although the camera may not be close to the quality of either the Note 4 or Sony Z3V, it is well above adequate for my needs, and frankly I found that it takes quite nice pictures as long as you pay a little bit of attention to things such as lighting, focus, and holding the camera still.
I love the active display, and I also love the motion detector or proximity detector as it were. It's great never having to actually pick up the phone to see what time it is or for that matter to see if any notifications have come in that require greater attention than a glance. I also love that I can look at greater detail on the notifications without fully waking the phone. Being able to wave my hand over the phone at any time to see the notifications, and also being able to waive the ringer quiet are two great additional features that I have found I've grown to love.
The radios on Motorola's have always been a top performer in my humble opinion, and the turbo is no slouch in that regard either, living up to the historic reputation. The few pieces of what is traditionally called bloat ware that the turbo has are really very effective and useful tools, but yet the turbo is about as close to a pure vanilla Android experience as you're going to see on nearly any phone except for developer editions, and the very few other regular distribution model phones that are out there which have no bloatware.
I would love to see a developer edition of the Droid turbo, for one main reason and that is so that I could have wireless tether again. That's the only thing I really miss from other earlier phones. Of course, if someone is able to root this phone which is of course also highly unlikely as it appears now, then it would complete my requirements for the perfect phone.
Sent from my Droid Turbo on Tapatalk.