Samsung Galaxy Z Fold7 technical review

TechnologyDigital
18 Jul 2025 • 2:08 AM MYT
Nasi Lemak Tech
Nasi Lemak Tech

Malaysian tech reviews, unboxings, and guides. Simplifying tech for you.

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It’s July, and it’s time for the new Galaxy Z series! Introducing the new Samsung Galaxy Z Fold7. It’s bigger, thinner, surprisingly powerful, and also has upgraded cameras too. In this technical review of the Galaxy Z Fold7, we’re only going to talk about the phone objectively about the data we gathered after testing the Z Fold7 intensely for the past week.

Design

Anyway, let’s start by talking about the design. The overall design language of the Fold7 in itself is basically similar to the Z Fold6 with the angles. However, the new Z Fold7 is a lot thinner than before, and even thinner when it is unfolded. The phone is barely thicker than the USB-C port. It’s a drastic change compared to what we had before, and Samsung seems to be going on a thinness fever since the S25 Edge.

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The fingerprint scanner, which doubles as the power button, is also thinner. This might cause some issues as the sensor surface area is rather tiny. So when you’re registering your fingerprint, make sure to move and include as much of your fingerprint as possible.

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The camera bump is as thick as the phone, though. Thinness comes at a price, and the Z-height has to go somewhere – so we’re getting this camera bump instead. At least it’s parked to the side, as I personally dislike those big circular camera bumps at the back.

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But then again, because of how much the camera bump protrudes at the side, it will cause this kind of rocking motion.

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Cover display

Let’s now talk about the cover display. It is now a 6.5-inch Dynamic AMOLED 2X display that goes up to 120Hz refresh rate, and has a resolution of 2520×1080 pixels. If we do the math, this resolution is at 21:9 aspect ratio.

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With that said, watching movies in particular is fantastic using the cover display, because many movies are produced in 21:9 aspect ratio.

The maximum brightness of the cover display is at around 1350 nits in auto brightness, and with its default out of the box settings, it can cover 99.65% of sRGB and 84.55% of DCI-P3 color gamuts. If we head into the settings menu and change it to vividness level 3, then it can cover 100% of sRGB and 99.54% of DCI-P3 color gamuts. With a higher DCI-P3 color gamut coverage means that the colors are more vibrant – so it’s up to you how much vividness you want.

I also want to point out that the cover display, while it is larger, is not exactly that much bigger. It’s not as wide as the S25 Ultra’s screen, and reaching to the far side of the screen while using it one-handed is quite okay – at least for my hand size.

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Inner display

Once we unfold the device, the new, much bigger inner display reveals itself. It’s now using the Foldable Dynamic AMOLED 2X panel with an 8-inch size with a resolution of 1968 x 2184 pixels. The aspect ratio is kinda weird, at 82 : 91. It’s slightly longer on one side, but it’s very, very close to being a square.

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We did two tests for the color accuracy, splitting it down the middle. The left side has a maximum brightness of around 1337 nits, whereas the right side can go up to 1395 nits. A bit of a discrepancy, which happens to all foldable devices.

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The color gamut coverage of both sides are as shown on the screen and overall, I’d say that they’re very consistent. I also want to point out that before we did the battery life test, we used this test to calibrate the displays to 100 nits brightness. Surprisingly, the brightness of the cover display and both sides of the unfolded display are the same. I didn’t expect this but I’m surprised by how the displays sync the brightness. 100 nits on the cover display means 100 nits on the inner display.

With this inner display though, a lot of people will think that a bigger display is better for watching videos – but I disagree. Because of the aspect ratio, all videos will have massive black bars at the top and bottom of the screen. Certain apps does split the screen into two sections and eliminate the black bars while giving us more controls via the Flex Mode feature, like YouTube.

Though, we do have a permanent black hole on the screen now as the under-display camera is now gone.

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Crease

We can’t talk about the inner display without talking about the crease as well, and that’s why it has its own special segment. Any foldables will have a crease – the question is whether or not it’s obvious or deep to be noticeable or distracting.

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As far as we know, the hinge has been upgraded and it now has the name of Armor FlexHinge. Samsung is now using a waterdrop shape to curve the flexible display when it is closed, and the flexible screen is reinforced with a Grade 4 titanium lattice underneath it. The ultra-thin glass is also thicker, and has a new adhesive to stick better to the flexible screen as well.

Anyway, this is a bit difficult to talk about as the crease is always negligible when the Fold is new. It’s only after we use the phone for a few weeks or months before we can finally talk know how effective this new hinge truly is.

So far, the crease does feel to be very flat.

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Now, because of the thinness, I also thought it would be difficult to unfold – but Samsung did some changes to make it easier. First, the frame is flat, so it is already easier to get some leverage and my finger won’t slip off.

Secondly, the hinge seems to have two stages of stiffness, if that’s the right word? It’s a lot easier to get it open, then it’s a lot stiffer to get it to actually open. The stiff hinge can hold itself in place for the Flex Mode of course, and I do think that Samsung balanced the hinge very well.

Software

Since we’re talking about the features, let’s now talk about the software. The Galaxy Z Fold7 and Z Flip7 are the first devices to use Android 16 and One UI 8, alongside 7 years of Android OS upgrades and 7 years of security patches. It also comes with a few new features and also a few problems here and there.

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One UI 8 brings a lot of new changes, particularly to the foldables. We can now invoke the Circle To Search menu while in a game, and that will overlay the search info on top of the game. However, we have to turn on auto rotate for this feature to work, or else it’s quite disorienting as it goes back to portrait mode. This can be fixed via Modes and Routines by enabling auto rotate when a game is running – but I think this shouldn’t happen in the first place.

The new wallpaper with the flexible clock thing is a very unique feature that I actually like a lot. The clock automatically wraps around the subject in the image, and this works surprisingly well. Combined with wallpapers with parallax effect, it creates an amazing effect.

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Multitasking remains to be the best here with Samsung’s implementation of the taskbar. We can run lots of apps side by side, and perhaps doom scroll two social media feeds at once since we have two eyes. One eye on one social media.

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Performance

As for the performance, I am actually surprised. The Galaxy Z Fold7, being such a thin phone with practically no cooling system, managed to control the Snapdragon 8 Elite to the point that it performs as one of best among all the phones that I’ve tested.

For more context, watch out other video where we talked about how different phones performed differently even if they have the same chipset. The wattage that the chip takes in, the software optimizations that it has, and also the render resolution are the three most important things when it comes to chipset optimization – and Samsung did an amazing job on the Galaxy Z Fold7.

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