3 Foldable Smartphones You Can Buy This Year
In the past few weeks,
foldable smartphones have made the leap from prototype to practical as big
manufacturers have announced their own take on a flexible, multi-screen phone.
These phones won’t be for everyone — prices of $2,000 and up will keep plenty of
buyers away — but even if you aren’t buying, you have to appreciate the tech
behind these big-screen gadgets. And if they're out of your price range, you
should know that manufacturers are already buzzing about cheaper models.
Samsung
Galaxy Fold
Samsung’s first foldable will also be the
first folding phone to hit the US market, launching on April 26. And though it
comes at a luxury price of $1,980, that’s budget-friendly compared to the rest
of the latest crop of smartphones.
The Galaxy Fold has a 4.6-inch AMOLED
exterior screen, which unfolds like a book to reveal a 7.3-inch interior
screen. Unfolding the phone causes whatever apps you were using to seamlessly
appear on the interior screen in a larger format, so there’s no fuss
transitioning from one mode to another.
Beyond the high price,
this phone does have some quirks, with large black bezels around the exterior
of the phone that look out of place on a modern smartphone. The Galaxy Fold is
also a bulky phone that’s nearly the depth of two smartphones, making it feel
huge compared to other foldable models which are only slightly thicker than a
traditional phone. But Samsung has clearly worked to give the Galaxy Fold a
streamlined user interface.
Release date: April
26 from AT&T and T-Mobile
Price: $1,980
Price: $1,980
Huawei
Mate X
While the Galaxy Fold
opens like a book to reveal a tablet-sized display inside, Huawei’s Mate X keeps its screen entirely
on the outside. When folded, the Mate X has a 6.6-inch front display and
6.4-inch rear display — but when unfolded, it becomes an 8-inch tablet. That’s
the largest screen of any of today’s folding phones.
Though we would worry
about scratching the wrap-around screen, the design is undeniably sleek. The
slim bezels match what we expect from other modern smartphones, and while it is
thicker than standard phones, it’s not as bulky as the Galaxy Fold. The
downside is the Mate X’s staggering $2,600 price, which makes it a definite
luxury item.
Release date: Mid-2019
Price: $2,600
Price: $2,600
LG
V50 ThinQ
LG’s entry into the
multi-screen market isn’t exactly a “folding” phone. Instead of a large single
display that folds in half, the V50 is a completely ordinary smartphone
with a 6.4-inch QHD+ OLED display. The phone gets a multiscreen experience
similar to the Galaxy Fold or Mate X with the addition of the Dual Screen, a
snap-on second screen that attaches to the V50 like a case.
When attached, the phone folds open and closed like any of its
competitors — the only difference is a somewhat unsightly gap between the
screens, making it resemble a Nintendo DS more than a smartphone. Because of
that gap, you can’t (and wouldn’t want to) stretch an image across the two
screens. Instead, the second screen seems most useful for multitasking or
acting aa dedicated keyboard or game controller. It’s an interesting take on
the multi-screen concept, but it’s not quite as impressive as smartphones with
folding screens. Some trademark filings suggest LG may be working on a folding screendevice, but it isn’t here yet — and there’s no word on when it might
be.
The V50 is due out early this year, but there
isn’t a specific release date or price yet. We expect the phone to cost around
$900, but the second screen won’t be included — and there’s no word on what it
might cost.
Release date: Early
2019 on Sprint
Price: N/A
Price: N/A
Motorola,
Oppo, Xiaomi, and TCL all have prototypes
While the three phones we’ve already discussed are the only
models you can order right now, a lot of manufacturers are working on
prototypes — some of which could hit the market this year.
Motorola
The Motorola Razr popularized the idea of the flip phone with
its slim folding design, and the brand may be making a comeback. Motorola VP of
Global Product Dan Dery confirmed that Motorola is working on a smartphonewith a foldable screen and has “no intention of coming later
than everybody else in the market," which would mean we could see the
phone by this summer.
Rumors and patents suggest this will be a Razr-style flip phone
with a single portrait screen that folds in half. With the foldable era just
beginning, this could be the perfect time to revive the Razr.
Oppo
Though this Chinese
company hasn’t committed to releasing a foldable phone, Oppo VP Brian Shen
has shared images ofa prototype. Though there are no details beyond these images, the
phone looks a lot like Huawei’s Mate X, with a large tablet screen that folds
in half to become a smartphone-sized device with a screen on the front and
back. Shen has said the model may enter production if there’s demand.
Xiaomi
Like Huawei and Oppo,
Xiaomi’s foldable concept features a single large exterior screen that folds
closed into a smartphone-sized package. But unlike the competition, Xiaomi’s
prototype folds into three segments, with a wing on either side of the smartphone
display that folds back. Xiaomi President Lin Bin posted a video previewof the gadget in action — and though the folding mechanism
seems odd, it clearly works.
Like the rest of this list, there’s no definite clue as to when
this will be released, or how much it will cost.
TCL
Though the company hassaid it has no plans to release a foldable phone in 2019, it’s shown off a
number of concept models — and they may be the most interesting of the lot. One
prototype resembled the Galaxy Fold, with a 7.2-inch screen that folds closed
to hide (and protect) the screen inside the phone body. However, unlike the
Galaxy Fold, TCL’s concept didn’t have an exterior screen. Instead, LED lights
on the outside could display information like the time — but to do anything
more complicated, you would have to open the phone.
The most exciting thing about TCL’s foldable phone is the price:
the company aims to make folding phones that cost 30% less than the competition.
If TCL sticks to that price point, it could make the folding phone affordable —
or at least more affordable
than it is now.





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