Samsung Galaxy Z Fold 6 review: the best folder going is only minor upgrade | Samsung

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Samsung Galaxy Z Fold 6 review: the best folder going is only minor upgrade | Samsung

Samsung’s most advanced, hi-tech folding phone for 2024 is the Galaxy Z Fold 6, which looks to see off rivals from Google, OnePlus and others with a lighter frame, bigger and better screens, and the fastest chip available for Android.

The latest phone-tablet hybrid from the category pioneer is designed to be the ultra-premium device of choice for buyers, but faces stiff competition from several worthy challengers, most of which undercut the South Korean firm on price.

The sixth-generation device costs an eye-watering £1,799 (€1,999/$1,899.99/A$2,749), making it more expensive than last year’s model and even more than Samsung’s top new laptop.

Needless to say, the Fold 6 is for the well-heeled only, priced according to the many expensive gadgets it hopes to replace: your tablet, phone and PC.

The thinner, flatter profile makes the Fold 6 look more modern, but it is the reduced weight that makes the biggest difference. Photograph: Samuel Gibbs/The Guardian

Samsung made big improvements to the physical design of the Fold series with its fifth-generation model last year. The Fold 6 builds on that in small but meaningful ways, including a 14g reduction in weight that makes it only 7g heavier than Samsung’s top normal phone, the S24 Ultra. That alone makes it easier to hold and carry in a pocket or bag.

The Fold 6’s flattened, matt aluminium sides make it easier to open with your thumbs while the wider outside screen feels less cramped than previous versions for messaging and phone-type things.

Open the Fold 6 like a book for the 7.6in tablet screen, which is significantly brighter than previous models, making it much easier to read outdoors. HDR films really pop. You can still see the crease under the glare of lights and feel it in the centre where it folds, but it otherwise disappears into the background during use.

The Fold 6 is the closest Samsung yet to being normal phone sized when closed while remaining tablet when open. Photograph: Samuel Gibbs/The Guardian

Specifications

  • Main screen: 7.6in QXGA+ 120Hz Amoled flexible display

  • Cover screen: 6.3in HD+ 120Hz Amoled

  • Processor: Qualcomm Snapdragon 8 Gen 3

  • RAM: 12GB

  • Storage: 256, 512GB or 1TB

  • Operating system: One UI 6.1 based on Android 14

  • Camera: 50+12+10MP rear with 3x telephoto; 10MP and 4MP selfie cameras

  • Connectivity: 5G, dual sim, esim, USB-C, wifi 6E, NFC, Bluetooth 5.3, GNSS

  • Water resistance: IP48 (1.5 metres for 30 minutes)

  • Dimensions folded: 153.5 x 68.1 x 12.1mm

  • Dimensions unfolded: 153.5 x 132.6 5.6mm

  • Weight: 239g

Multitasking power with two-day battery life

The Fold 6 can run more apps on screen simultaneously than is feasible to actually use. Photograph: Samuel Gibbs/The Guardian

The Fold 6 has the same top Qualcomm Snapdragon 8 Gen 3 chip and 12GB of RAM as the S24 Ultra and Z Flip 6 and benefits from the power when multitasking. It runs up to eight apps on screen simultaneously without breaking into a sweat and handles AI, games and various apps with aplomb. It thoroughly trounces most competitors on raw power, and is snappy when hooked up to an external monitor, keyboard and mouse for use as Android PC.

The battery lasts about 48 hours between charges when using a mix of the outside and inside screens for about seven hours, which is similar to the best regular phones and longer than the main folding competition.

Sustainability

Samsung says its strengthened hinge is more durable, but a case is probably prudent to protect from drops. Photograph: Samuel Gibbs/The Guardian

Samsung does not provide an expected lifespan for the battery but it should last in excess of 500 full-charge cycles with at least 80% of its original capacity.

The phone is generally repairable. Inside screen repairs cost £514. Samsung offers a self-repair programme, as well as Care+ accidental damage insurance that reduces the cost of repairs to £139.

The Fold 6 is made from recycled aluminium, cobalt, copper, glass, gold, plastic and rare earth elements. Samsung offers trade-in and recycling schemes for old devices. The company publishes annual sustainability reports but not impact assessments for individual products.

AI and multitasking

If you ever wanted to see a flying saucer in a field or give yourself a sombrero for your selfies, you can with very little skill required. Left: sketch input; right: AI output. Photograph: Samuel Gibbs/The Guardian

The Fold 6 runs One UI 6.1 based on Android 14 and will receive software and security updates for seven years from release, making it one of the longest-supported phones available.

One UI is the better than competitors’ software at making use of the extra size and flexibility of the folding screen. You can run up to eight apps on-screen at once, utilise various partially folded modes almost like a mini-laptop and many other tools. Whatever you can do with an Android tablet you can do with the Fold and more.

It has a similar set of AI features to the S24 series and Flip 6, too, including Google’s Gemini AI chatbot and the excellent Circle to Search, voice transcription and translation services, AI summarisation of notes and sites, as well as various proofing, grammar and rewriting tools built into the keyboard.

The new photo assist tool is much easier to use on the big screen compared with the Flip 6, allowing you to turn freehand sketches into real-looking objects inserted into your photos, which is lots of fun.

Camera

The Fold can shoot photos open or closed, but the camera is easier to handle when shut like a regular phone. Photograph: Samuel Gibbs/The Guardian

The Fold 6 has a similar five-camera setup to the previous two models, including a 4-megapixel selfie camera under the internal screen that is useful only for video calls.

On the back is a 50MP main camera, a 12MP ultra wide camera and a 10MP 3x telephoto camera. They shoot great photos in bright light, capture excellent portrait shots and do a solid job in low light. The 3x optical zoom doesn’t have much reach compared with newer 4x or 5x zooms, which is disappointing.

Despite the phone costing twice the price, the cameras only match those on Samsung’s regular S24 models from January.

The selfie camera at the top of the outside of the phone is decent, but is bettered by the ability to shoot self-portraits with the main cameras using the cover screen as a viewfinder. That’s one of many fun tricks the Fold is capable of, which also include shooting photos while propped up if you show the camera your palm.

Overall, the cameras on the Fold are good but not the best on the market for a foldable or regular phone.

Price

The Samsung Galaxy Z Fold 6 costs from £1,799 (€1,999/$1,899.99/A$2,749).

For comparison, the Z Flip 6 from £1,049, the the Galaxy S24+ costs £999, the Galaxy S24 Ultra costs £1,249, the OnePlus Open costs £1,299, the Honor Magic V2 costs £1,200 and the Google Pixel Fold costs £1,199.

Verdict

The Z Fold 6 is the most refined folder yet, and another small step towards the holy grail of being the same as a regular phone when closed but with a tablet on the inside.

It is still necessarily a bit thick, but it is just a few grams heavier than Samsung’s top regular phone, the S24 Ultra, and the outside screen is now the same width as a small phone such as the iPhone 13 mini.

The inside screen is super-bright and smooth, matching top non-folding devices for quality. The crease in the middle is still present but it doesn’t get in the way of usage. The materials needed to make the screen fold are still too soft for anything less than careful use and repairs are very expensive if the worst does happen.

Samsung’s many refinements are welcome but iterative and haven’t fundamentally changed the way the device handles over the last two Fold versions, which makes the price hike from the already eye-watering sum even more galling.

This is one of the most powerful and adaptable gadgets you can buy. But it is very much still a niche device for the wealthy. Something radical needs to happen to make the tablet-phone hybrid a mainstream option.

Pros: a phone and tablet in one, powerful multitasking abilities, phone-like outside screen, fantastic tablet screen, top performance, great battery life, water resistance, lighter.

Cons: extremely expensive, more fragile than a regular device and costly to repair, thicker than a normal phone, not a big leap over the previous generation, camera bettered on cheaper devices.

The hinge can hold the Fold open at a wide range of angles. Photograph: Samuel Gibbs/The Guardian



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