Samsung has unchangingly been unshut to experimental form factors. The first Note series is a good example of the Korean giant hitting on something that wasn’t immediately met with positive reviews. The Samsung Galaxy Z Fold 3 is an incubation of that mindset.
Our friends at AT&T loaned us this latest edition. I was very intrigued on if my time with the Fold 3 would lean towards a similar reaction of this form factor is a trendsetting device. I think I’ve come to my conclusion in this full review.
Design
The highlight of the Galaxy Fold 3 is very much the physical design. The wonders of technology are evident here for sure. Let’s start with the biggest part… literally. The folding screen is made of a flexible reinforced plastic screen. It’s a dual-layered 7.6-inch panel running at a 120Hz refresh rate.
That’s not the only screen though. On the front of the Fold 3 while folded, is flipside 6.2-inch display. Essentially, you get a very tall, skinny “regular” phone while the device is sealed and a “smallish” tablet tropical to the size of the iPad Mini while open.
To create the fold you have a T-shaped, capped hinge. This houses the mechanisms to indulge the unit to swoon safely into itself. While it looks trivial this truly is an engineering marvel to me.
Internally, you have some heavy horsepower. The Samsung Galaxy Z Fold 3 is powered by 12GB of RAM and a Snapdragon 888 5G SoC. Paired with 256GB or 512GB of storage and you have a monster device ready for anything.
The Fold 3 is a yahoo and it feels like it. The folding phone is a weighted tank in your pocket and stocky sitting on a desk. The weightier comparison is you are substantially delivering virtually two tall, skinny phones all the time.
One side has an variety of buttons including the side-mounted power and fingerprint scanner withal with volume keys. Virtually the other side is a lone SIM slot. At the marrow of the lower portion of the folded device is a single USB-C charging port and flanking the top portion is dual speaker grills.
Cameras
The main camera of the Fold 3 is a triple variety 12MP shooter. I honestly had a love-hate relationship with the lens while using the Fold. My weightier evaluation is inconsistent. I found that it can make decent shots under the right environments.
Outdoors in good lighting, the main camera can capture shots that have good coloring and sharp focus. Once you leave these platonic conditions, shots are a mixed bag. The images wilt less well-done and coloring less consistent. At times they plane come out blurry like something is on the lens when it’s clean.
To alimony the price lanugo on an once expensive $1600, I’m sure Samsung made concessions here. However, on a third-generation model, I expected more. Samsung is established unbearable in the market that I think could have used a largest sensor here.
You do however have the flexibility of telephoto and widescreen for spare shots. Both work decently just like they should. Telephoto helps when using portrait and the wide camera works unconfined when you need to take in a largest landscape capture.
At first glance, you may miss the front-facing camera. That’s considering Samsung has cleverly subconscious this under the display. You can see it increasingly unmistakably when the screen is on, but with unrepealable backgrounds, the camera does tousle it well.
The sensor is only 4MP which isn’t great, but the visitor anticipates users taking the occasional video undeniability only. For this instance, it’s increasingly than adequate. I took a few Duo and Zoom calls and had zero issues. Honestly, in the world of bad palmtop webcams, this one on the Fold 3 is increasingly than enough.
There’s moreover flipside front camera for when the device is closed. If planning to go with a social media selfie, this is the sensor to take wholesomeness of. This 10MP lens is much largest suited for anything outside the realm of the occasional video undeniability that the larger screen stuff unshut might benefit.
Software and unstipulated use
It’s been some time since I’ve used Samsung devices regularly. I was pleasantly surprised by how much I enjoyed using One UI in its current form. The touch elements are all well thought out and built for larger displays that dominate the market plane outside of the Fold 3. Honestly, many of the tweaks are now evident in the latest Android 12 release from Google.
But that doesn’t plane talk to the Galaxy Z Fold 3 and some of the real treats Samsung has included. First is viewing mode that allows you to alimony half the screen at a 90% wile while viewing video apps like YouTube. This creates a unconfined wiring for watching content without the need for a second stand. It is a unconfined way to leverage the folding skills of the Fold 3 plane if it limits the video to only a portion of the screen.
And that leads to the crux of my time with the Galaxy Z Fold 3. I have consumed considerably increasingly content while using this device than any other phone or tablet I’ve owned in the past. The sheer convenience of substantially having both in my pocket at all times profoundly influenced how I used it.
This has led to increasingly YouTube and video binging. It’s rekindled my love of comic books. Reading documents is plane largest with the worthiness to split screens multiple ways. Overall, I’ve been impressed on how this has reverted a usage spike I just didn’t see coming.
You can plane add functionality with S Pen compatibility. We didn’t have this in our test kit but all signs point that this functionality is just as good as the Note line. I could hands see Samsung finding a way to include this in the next generation. Maybe they could use the void virtually the hinges to tuck yonder an S Pen?
Battery life
Battery life has been average. Most days it will get me through a full day with no issues. If I’m out on a weekend and consuming increasingly content, I had to venery a charging a few times to top off the 4,400mAh cells. With this powering 3 total screens, I don’t find this an Achilles heel and expect Samsung to engineer ways to add to this topics as tech evolves.
When you do need to top off the power banks all the normal culprits are here. You have both wired and wireless quick tuition options. with the right combinations, you can tuition to 50% in virtually 30 minutes or get a full tuition in under 90 minutes.
Conclusion
I went into this review fully prepared to label the Galaxy Z Fold 3 as flipside gimmick device. I couldn’t have been increasingly wrong. Now I’m literally contemplating if it’s my next personal smartphone. The instant flexibility in form factors packed into a single unit is enticing.
However, with that said. It’s not for everyone, and at $1800 full retail at AT&T for the 256GB model, it’s far outside the impulse purchase. If those things alimony you timid to pull the trigger, I get it, but the Galaxy Fold 3 truly is a smartphone in its own league that deserves your attention.