With the arrival of the Samsung Galaxy Z Fold 2, the foldable phone scene definitely became a lot more intriguing. Believe it or not, Samsung has released three foldable phones so far, and the latest one fixes many wrongs that had slipped up into the previous foldable wares.
Samsung Galaxy Z Fold 2 vs Huawei Mate Xs: Price and release date
The Samsung Galaxy Z Fold 2 is coming later this month, on September 18. The price tag shouldn’t really knock your socks off – Samsung wants $2,000 for the foldable, and that’s kind of normal for such a device these days. You should technically be able to get the Galaxy Fold 2 in many regions, though sufficient supply isn’t guaranteed. In the meantime, the Huawei Mate Xs isn’t available in the US and its availability is a bit limited. Then comes the price – at $2,999, it’s a much more expensive device.
Samsung Galaxy Z Fold 2 vs Huawei Mate Xs: Design
Although foldable, the two devices couldn’t have been more different from one another. The Galaxy Fold 2 has two displays, an smaller external one and a 7.6-inch Super AMOLED folding screen on the inside. The phone itself opens up like a book. Overall, the device is quite thick and tall even when folded; you’ll definitely be aware of the monster in your pants at all times.
Samsung Galaxy Z Fold 2 vs Huawei Mate Xs
Samsung Galaxy Z Fold 2 vs Huawei Mate Xs: Display
The Huawei Mate Xs has no high-refresh rate display, but what it has is a large, 8-inch AMOLED display with the sharp resolution of 2480 by 2200 pixels. When you fold the phone, it transforms into a front 2480 x 1148-pixel 6.6-inch display, while the rear one stands at 6.4-inches and 2480 by 892 pixels.
A Kirin 990 chipset and 8GB of LPDDR4 RAM power up the Mate Xs, and users have 512GB of storage at their disposal and you can further expand on that with a proprietary nano memory card. The Mate Xs has no wireless charging, but it trumps the Z Fold 2 in wired charging: Huawei has put a 55W super-fast charger, and rest assured the phone gobbles it all up for an extremely fast recharging.
Samsung Galaxy Z Fold 2 vs Huawei Mate Xs
Samsung Galaxy Z Fold 2 vs Huawei Mate Xs: 5G support
Both phones have 5G support, just as we’ve come to expect from any top 2020 flagship device. The Z Fold 2 supports SA, NSA, Sub-6, mmWave, while the Mate Xs makes do with the n1, n3, n28, n38, n41, n77, n78, n79, SA, NSA bands and standards.
Samsung Galaxy Z Fold 2 vs Huawei Mate Xs: Software and features
Here are the best new app multitasking features that the Z Fold 2’s foldable design and Flex modes allow:
- Use Gmail, YouTube, Spotify, Outlook or native apps in a split mode between content and interface in Flex mode.
- Work on Word documents, Excel spreadsheets, or PowerPoint presentations with PC-like toolbars.
- Advanced Multi-Active Window mode lets you open 3 apps (from 11 supported) or files from the same app (Samsung Notes, Internet, Myfiles, or Office apps) in flexible layouts.
- Drag and drop content between app windows (Gallery, Internet, Message, Myfiles, Notes, Microsoft and Google apps) with the Split Screen Capture option.
- App continuity – watch a YouTube video on the cover screen, swirl the phone and continue on the main screen with the comments on the bottom half.
- Apps that have tablet versions switch to the productive tablet layout when the Mate Xs is opened.
- The stock foldable interface only covers the basics in split-screen functionality.
- Google apps can be side-loaded or alternatives found, but apps that probe for Google services won’t function well, including some games and payment.
- The squarish aspect ratio of the opened display means you very rarely use the full screen during video playback.
It’s easy to remember the Z Fold 2’s camera setup: a 12MP main + a 12MP telephoto + a 12MP wide-angle one. There’s no selfie camera on board: you will have to make do with the main camera, but that’s actually not a bad thing at all.
The phone sports a rather respectable camera kit, with a large 40MP main sensor, a 16MP camera with ultrawide angle lens for group photos or landscapes, and an 8MP telephoto camera with 3x optical zoom, not to mention the depth-sensing time-of-flight unit. The main sensor sports Huawei’s movel RYYB yellow pixel arrangement that is supposed to soak in more photons than the standard one with green pixels.