Recently, Windows Central did extensive coverage of the new Razer Phone, which is powered by Android and built for gamers. Razer invited us – and other non-Android sites – to be prebriefed on the phone, which is why we had so much detailed and an in-depth, hands-on coverage. The big Razer Phone article is our No. 2 story for the last 30 hours despite the fact that we have run nearly 100 articles between Wednesday and now. That should tell you something about interest in this device and our decision to cover it. Nonetheless, there was some vocal pushback from our core audience. Are we going to start covering every Android phone now? Why is this article even here? How dare you … people come here for Windows news, not Android phones! Best VPN providers 2020: Learn about ExpressVPN, NordVPN & more As the executive editor, I feel it's only appropriate to address these concerns even if they are in the minority (many in the YouTube comments understood the decision). As I consider myself a Windows phone fan, I understand the disagreement with our choice. It's only fair I address these concerns.

Will we cover every Android phone? Short answer: no. Longer answer: Our focus is Microsoft, Windows, and the larger ecosystem that connects it all. That extends to iOS and Android, as Microsoft has a lot of software that runs on those phones that is of interest to our readers. With the Windows 10 Fall Creators Update, iOS and Android both work with the Continue on PC feature found in the Microsoft Edge browser and Microsoft Launcher for Android.