, a respectable sixth edition of its venerable Fold and Flip line of handsets with bendy displays and a hinge.
According to the leaked
specs sheet, they are expected to come with some modest upgrades such as a faster chipset or brighter display, but not better cameras or some drastic redesign, and you can grab the
Galaxy Z Fold 6 and Z Flip 6 preorder reservation bonus already.
What the humble upgrades basically mean, however, is that even before the Galaxy Z Fold 6 is announced, it may already be playing second fiddle in the foldable book-style phones niche. How come?
The Galaxy Z Fold 6 won’t excel in specs and design
Samsung won’t or just can’t
Despite all the talk and corporate struggles how to catch up to the Chinese
foldable phone makers like Oppo, Huawei, OnePlus, Xiaomi, or Honor, Samsung has seemingly not figured it out just yet.
The latest rumors peg the
Samsung Galaxy Z Fold 6 as having a 7.6-inch main display and 6.3-inch cover screen, or a piddly 0.1-inch growth for the external screen. It should also be slightly shorter and wider, as well as 14g lighter and 1.3mm thinner when folded than its
Z Fold 5 predecessor.
While at first glance this is progress, these dimensions still mean a 12.1mm thickness and 240g weight. Those numbers denote a Galaxy Z Fold 6 that will be far from the thinnest, lightest and most powerful foldable phone even now, and it will have to tide Samsung over for a year until the next edition.
Given that prospective foldable phone users are mostly worried about their size and heft, as well as mediocre cameras, the Z Fold 6 will hardly do anything to excel in those areas and attract those sitting on the fence of the undecided.
Chinese foldables still rule the land
And it’s hard to catch up
Ever since the OG Galaxy Fold hinge fiasco that forced Huawei to go back to the drawing board to upgrade its first foldable phone, the Mate X, it slowly became clear that the Chinese phone makers can one-up Samsung at its own game.
Even the 2020
Mate Xs was thinner than the rumored
Galaxy Z Fold 6 dimensions, and then we had impossible thin and light foldables with near invisible creases like the Oppo Find N3 or the
OnePlus Open.
Recent rumors about the next
foldable phone from Xiaomi – the
Mix Fold 4 – are only exacerbating the contrast between what Samsung is able to craft, and what its Chinese competition has in the pipeline.
The new Xiaomi Mix Fold 4 may become the thinnest foldable
The Mix Fold 4 is expected to be under 10mm thin when closed, vying for the thinnest foldable title with the
Honor Magic V2. Not only that, but it should house a large 5,000 mAh battery and a quartet of cameras.
No change in cameras or battery capacity is expected for the Z Fold 6, on the other hand, while foldables like the Oppo Find N3 or
Pixel Fold are already shipping with periscope zoom cameras and the Mix Fold 4 is expected to join the folded optics zoom fray.
In addition, only the Z Flip 6 is expected to come with a more elaborate hinge mechanism and ironed out crease, while Samsung is reportedly content with the crease depth and phone thickness it achieved by moving to a teardrop hinge shape with the Z Fold 5.
In contrast, the crease of phones like the OnePlus Open or Oppo Find N3 is barely noticeable thanks to an elaborate hinge mechanism that is certified to hold for the life cycle of the phone.
This elaborate hinge keeps the Find N3 crease near invisible
Where does that leave Samsung? Well, nothing about the
Galaxy Z Fold 6 but the fast
Snapdragon 8 Gen 3 chipset will be truly exceptional. Foldables from Oppo, OnePlus, Vivo, Honor, Huawei, or Xiaomi already have more elegant designs, better cameras, larger batteries, or brighter displays, after all.
About the only advantage the
Galaxy Z Fold 6 has is its brand name which will make it globally available in markets where the others don’t sell, as well as the S Pen support. If Samsung manages to keep the
Z Fold 6 price in check, too, it might have a decent chance on the market.
Seeing how Samsung scrapped the plans for a
cheaper Fold FE this year, however, it may have gone back to the drawing board to prep the true Chinese
foldable phone killer for 2025.