The Galaxy S23 FE is an update to the mostly well-liked Galaxy S21 FE, upping the performance level and bettering optics as well. The usual stuff, obviously.
But the real highlight here is its design -easy and smooth DYR3 Purple. Nothing out of this world They are one of the nicest looking colorways we have seen in years and they just fall under my radar.
As seen on the images, the phone has an IP68 rating and a similar appearance to Galaxy S23 series although with matte sides. The front panel is the screen from a Galaxy 21 FE - a 6.4-inch Dynamic AMOLED 2X with1080p resolution and refresh rate of up to120Hz.
And a chipset upgrade is obviously inevitable. The Galaxy S23 FE takes a one-gen leap to Exynos 2200 (the SoC of the Galaxy S22 series) from Exynos 2100 on the Galaxy S21 FE. International version of that The US model is based on Snapdragon 8 Gen 1 (formerly known as the SD888) instead of Snapdragon883.
While the base model continues to offer 128GB at its lowest tier, that's paired with now getting a minimum of 8 GB of RAM. Now honestly not having a microSD expansion, known to be everyone's favorite here.
Moving on to the camera. The rear composition is similar to that of the S21 FE but with a higher resolution on the 50MP OIS main cam, and supporting it are an 8MP 3x OIS telephoto and a (presumably) third camera unit at just over twelve megapixels for ultrawide duties. That's connected to a 10MP imager on the selfie camera.
And that's about it. The rest is a transfer from the S21 FE – dual speakers, 4,500 mAh battery with 25W fast charging support + wireless and UD fingerprint scanner. S23 FE comes with Android 13 and One UI 5.1
The Galaxy S23 FE comes off as an inexpensive flagship smartphone with great display, strong hardware and capable camera kit. The hand is there, where Samsung had to take a break from soo why the price would still be in line from last year's chip over that tele camera and even down pushed the Gorilla Glass of Victus at Glass 5. Nevertheless, those cherry-picked highlights do add up to a pretty decent smartphone at least on paper.
There are no major updates here over the Galaxy S21 FE – it has a next-gen chip and a higher-res main camera, so we find it unlikely to pique the interest of owners of that device. However the only thing we can really come up with off of that is something relevant to this, which may piss some people off upfront.
Samsung Galaxy S23 FE Price in India:
The variant I have been testing is the entry-level version of the Samsung Galaxy S23 FE with 8GB RAM and 128GB storage in Mint colour, which retails at Rs. 59,999. There is also a more premium 256GB option of the Samsung Galaxy S23 FE that carries an identical RAM amount i.e., 8GB and comes with heftier price tag: Rsomorphic9,999 putting this smartphone at knife's edge competitive to vanilla version of Samsung Galaxy S23 which includes Qualcomm’s Snapdragon 8 Gen-2 SoC. The device is sold in another two colors: 'Graphite' and Purple. The company has also introduced two special edition colors for the smartphone called Indigo and Tangerine, which will be available only via its webpage. The 256GB is a nice addition, but I would have appreciated one of the higher end models with more RAM to justify that price as well.
Samsung Galaxy S23 FE Design:
The design language of the Samsung Galaxy S23 FE which follows in line with that seen on its sibling, the members of same series, means this phone has no need to feel ashamed while sitting amongst those handsets. Better yet, it slips in line perfectly between the S23 and the S23+ with its 6.4” screen size.
The Galaxy S23 FE is indeed offered in a variety of colors, but the model that grabs most attention unsurprisingly so has to be this Purple version. While this isn't anything flashy, it looks better with some sunlight. In addition to Purple, there will be Mint, Cream and Graphite options also are Indigo.
You will not be able to see this at first, but you can feel it immediately – the new Galaxy S23 FE is 209 grams heavy. This shows a gain of 32 extra grams compared with DE the same in size and thickness Galaxy S21 FE.
It's hardly compact either, matching the 6.6-inch S22+ in size and weight if little else except being a tad taller and thicker.
The Galaxy S23 FE is a bit more upmarket, with dual-glass design in an aluminum (albeit now matte) frame; the Galaxy S21 was glass-and-plastic. Nice little update, that it would be easy to miss.
The S23 FE has two panels of flat Gorilla Glass 5, the old one had a Victus front that's somewhat downgraded.
In the end, like any recent Galaxy S smartphone, the Galaxy S23 FE is IP68-rated for dust and water resistance.
So here we go with the new Galaxy.
On the front, you'll find a 6.4-inch Dynamic AMOLED 2X panel with full HD+ resolution extended further into the corners. The bezels are quite thick, but then again it is not a flagship. The punch-hole for the selfie camera at least is very small.
Literally, it's in the top bezel right next to where you might expect an earpiece and one of two front speakers is (neither we see looking straight at the naked phone) but you can't really tell.
Also mostly invisible is the under-display fingerprint scanner at the bottom. It's quite fast and reliable.
The S23 FE looks broadly similar to the S23 and S23+, though its frame is matte, not glossy; it doesn't share a color with the back panel. It is this dual-tone design, made more dramatic by the silver camera rings one S23 FE and not on any of Samsung's normal S23 phones.
The Purple back panel looks good, as we know for a fact but the silver camera rings give it an edge over that. There are three of those, poking a little out at the back. Along side the sample of 12MP ultrawide camera, which sits with a new 50-megapixel primary and an existing but effective 8 MP x3 telephoto. Up front there's a single LED flash on the top right and flush with the back.
The frame is brushed aluminum, and while it feels nice to the touch, it's not all that grippy. It's not completely flat, just gently curved to give the phone an appearance and feel of being slightly thinner.
The Galaxy S23 FE is antennas for as far the eye can see, left.
The volume and power/lock on the right
This contains one of the microphones and in theory should click back easily but sometimes takes a little persuasion.
On the bottom, we see another pair of mics and on each side flanking a USB-C port yeah you got it right another speaker.
Galaxy S23 FE 158 x 76.5 x 8.2mm, weighs209g (discrete sizes from the Galaxy A73) -- up substantially to +2mmm taller and wider by a hair thicker than theS21FE It's also 32 grams heavier.
The Galaxy S23 FE is a well-constructed, premium-feeling device with an undeniable aesthetic appeal. And yeah, slipping out of hands it is -- you cannot get around that with the Xperia 5 (but then this isn't very large either which automatically makes single hand use a base easier). But it has a weirdly heavy touch, which might not appeal to everyone.
Bottom line, it is a really good phone with flagship design and water protection but them huge screen bezels along with weight 209g may repulse to some consumers.
Samsung Galaxy S23 FE Camera:
While the standard and wide angle cameras both use more years-old 32MP Samsung sensors (up from 25MP), only a primary camera of particular interest is downright new: set up near-identically to that on the Galaxy S21 FE, it’s now packing an ultra high-res 50-megapixel sensor. This sums up to a 50MP OIS main, an 8MP OIS 3x telephoto, and an ultrawide cam with the same parameters (12MP). As for the front cameras, we have a 10MP one — it is unsurprisingly from S22 series.
The main camera features a Samsung ISOCELL (S5K)GN3 1/1.57" module with the doubled Tetra cell filter and effective pixels of 50MP, which assists it to output up to quad Bayer-ed detail at full res or be reduced down in any mode for better shot-to-shot consistency. This sensor is coupled with a 23mm f/1.8 stabilized lens (OIS), and dual-pixel PDAF has been thrown in as well.
Since it is the same camera that we find in the Galaxy S22 and possibly also in the future when an eventual successor to this smartphone, even though you would expect a 12.5MP resolution for photos if they had used different sensors with higher resolutions than those of its competitors; instead another model resolves them at "just" 12 megapixels. The Field of view is also great as well.
The 8MP telephoto camera has a Hynix Hi847 sensor (also used in the S20 FE and S21 FE), with 1.0µm pixels, f/2.4 OIS lens at an equivalent field of view to ~76mm for provides 3x optical zoom over the post-capture cropped main camera is used instead due do varying focal lengths across models. As with previous Galaxy FE models, this zoom camera records 12MP images that are slightly up scaled and interpolated for no reason.
An ultra-wide system with a 13MP sensor built around an older Samsung S5K3L6 -type standard lens stands out as well. There is a fixed focus to infinity. The camera is supposed to be a 12MP unit, so we suspect some pixel binning (or downsizing) goes on here.
The selfie camera relies on a 10MP sensor from Samsung (S5K3J1), the same one found in Galaxy S20-series models, sporting an optical format of about 1/33" and offering pixels which are relatively large at around 566nm. The lens the camera uses has a focal length equivalent to 25mm and an f/2.4 aperture. There is no auto-focus, everything is in focus at infinity.
Samsung Galaxy S23 FE Camera app:
Following closely behind is the camera app, which is identical to what you'll find in a Samsung device these days. A swipe to the left or right will cycle through all of them in a linear carousel, and there is an option as well to rearrange some modes or remove any from within Settings. Swiping up or down will change camera sides.
The view Finder has. 3 zoom shortcuts. 6x, 1x,3x are displays Tapping on any will show you even more zooms options, which includes the 2 enter image description here. You can tap to magnification in steps of upto10enter your images.
The one oddity is that the aspect options are what trigger full resolution mode on the primary camera.
You also have Camera and Settings in the upper left of your screen which lets you tweak a great many things too. You don't get a separate setting screens for photo and video, like we said there is not many options here. The usual stuff like grid lines, location data ETC are here. You can also enable or disable the Scene optimizer.
There are also two zoom modes, wide and standard (cropped), with the selfie viewfinder. However, this is a common thing with Galaxy phones in general.
Night Mode changes all cameras, including Auto Night (which functions the same way it does on iPhones and Xiaomi smartphones).
There's a Pro mode, too. Granular exposure controls with manual focus + peaking, shutter speed control up to 30s for all cameras There is also Pro Video mode.
The Galaxy S23 FE, however, does NOT offer the expert RAW mode.
Samsung Galaxy S23 FE Daylight Photo Quality:
While the former uses a chip-matching Snapdragon processor and ISP from Qualcomm, those upgraded shooters pulled in for use on Exynos models should render similarly again images -- if not identical, thanks to chipset-specific tuning tweaks. On the back, there are three cameras - comprising a 50-megapixel OIS main unit with dual-pixel autofocus; an optical image stabilized (OIS) 10-megapixel zoom module offering up to 3x magnification; and an ultrawide snapper rated at 8 megapixels. The front camera is 10MP.
These models have also been distinguished by slight changes in photo and video quality.
One slight difference between all the photos is that the mode with better noise reduction for both front and back images to favoring Snapdragons.
The primary cameras capture high-resolution, vibrant images with excellent dynamic rang These are also a tad sharp with the Snapdragon model, but sharper doesn't always equate to better detail.
The 50MP photos are pretty good - they're rich in detail and sharp, have acceptable noise levels, slightly muted colors and super wide dynamic range. If you need a bit more detail this mode is for that
The 12MP output is the result of upscaling, with the default file size saved by this camera being 8MP. In fact, if we take a closer look at our samples you can already find evidence of some kind of upscaling as they appear softer than ever and lack the usual per-pixel detail even more clearly.
The images from the telephoto cameras are decent. They are decent on the side of images coming from its Snapdragon version and yet again clean without heavy noise, meanwhile ones sourced under this Exynos's wings have more moderate luminance reduction a tastefully improved color tone with no evidence of flatness but added detail. There is not much of a difference though.
The 12MP ultrawide camera is actually based on a 13MP sensor and it saves 12MP shots. It has light corner softness, and the image does not have a fish-eye characteristic. This sharpness advantage is even more noticeable with the super wide pictures, where those from the Snapdragon version are significantly sharper but still not quite as true-to-life-looking of those shot in Exynos versions.
The processing differences come through also in selfies -- the Snapdragon model takes sharper, more blemished-looking portraits while the Exynos one is a tad softer but generally better balanced.
Portrait mode Gearing down to 3x Here are the default portrait lens x Maxixel lengths. Every portrait appears classy, with competent topic separation, dynamically exposed subject, likeable blurring and vast colour range.
In less than stellar light, the portraits can get a little mushy.
The 2x blew over the lossless-yield-highest-1x, so some more delicate progress is normal here.
Samsung Galaxy S23 FE Low Light Camera:
The camera app of Samsung gives you Auto Night Mode support in low-light conditions - it shows up as a small moon icon and by tapping on that moon, you can turn off the mode. Generally it is 1s faster than the normal night mode, but when this prompted and regular Night Mode outputs were consistent_ across all cameras.
Both phones by night are capable of snapping some pretty nice shots. As with day shots, images from the Snapdragon model have less noise reduction and look cleaner.
Both of the next images are from zoom cameras, and here too you see less separation between two devices with main camera, biggest difference on primary wide 48MP where Snapdragon phone jumps up to noticeable better image quality than Dimensity.
We've gone ahead and done a full photoshoot on the Snapdragon model as well.
Our low-light Auto photos with the main camera are quite good - resolved detail is on a high level, exposure is nicely bright and we have very realistic color reproduction, nice contrast and wide dynamic range. Noise is cleaned up very well.
First we have the shots taken out of Night Mode, which look more realistic in terms of both color and (darker) exposure. They might show a little more blown highlights, but that's about it.
The telephoto camera almost never fires. Through its lens it captures excellent shots they are well lit, colorful and have wide scope of shades. They are at least decent in detail and, yes we can see noise smeared everywhere. And those have also once again been upscaled from 8MP, which does not boast them to be great.
As of now, the camera app is resorting to a 3x digital zoom over its usual 1x output for everything else and results in some extremely bad detail when we get down to the pixel level.
Last but not least, some shots with the ultrawide snapper. It shares the same predictable quality as with primary cam - Auto mode delivers punchy exposure, deep colors and relatively resolved detail. The dynamic range is really wide.
We're really just nitpicking at this point; there are a few artifacts that are likely the result of noise reduction processing, but honestly.
Ultrawide | Night Mode OFF: For that darker, more natural exposure. But they are far, FAR noisier than anyone would want to use. They do retain adequate color saturation, and dynamic range is good.
And see how the primary camera compares to others from our very detailed Photo compare database.
Samsung Galaxy S23 FE Video Quality:
With those four cameras, the Samsung Galaxy S23 FE can record 4K30 video from all of them, with a step up to 60fps on both its primary and selfie cams (also capturing at that clip is shooting in regular stabilization modes), or opt for an extra high-res shot, if only framing becomes easier over just one lens: The main cam supports recording in up to 8K24.
It even allows you to turn on electronic stabilization regardless of camera, quality or frame rate. There's also a 1080p resolution Super Stable option, which it seems crops the video in slightly but works best when shot at 60fps.
Pro Mode users benefit from high bitrate video capturing too, while the whole HDR10+ in recoding experience is optionally available for HDR fans who want it.
The audio is recorded within a 256Kbps stereo stream with sampling at 48Khz. It sounds excellent with the numerous clips we place along on the Galaxy S23 FE.
Now that 4,500mAh is the battery capacity of both their S21 FE and also the S22+. The new fall-back chipset is 4nm, which should lead to better battery life than the predecessor.
However, the Snapdragon variant ultimately delivered a better experience. By active use-time, it saw 9:45h vs. the Exynos at only 8:28h.
In web browsing and social media apps the two models tied, however every other scenario saw performance from the Snapdragon version pull ahead by about 20%.
The audio is recorded in a 256Kbps, 48 Khz sampling stereo stream. It sings beautifully on all the clips we filmed with the Galaxy S23 FE.
Samsung Galaxy S23 FE Battery Capacity:
It's fed by a 4,500mAh battery same capacity as the S21 FE and one also finding its place inside every S22+. The 4nm chipset is likely to result in better battery life than the one across its previous model.
In fact, it was the Snapdragon model that proved more competitive. There it managed 9:45h of active use vs. 8:28 on the Exynos edition, for example.
Overall, the two models are quite close during web browsing as well as apps like social media but this Snapdragon variant maintains a good 20% lead in all scenarios other than just that.
Samsung Galaxy S23 FE Charging Speed:
The Samsung Galaxy S23 FE is compatible with 25W fast wired charging and up to 15W fast wireless charging. To talk more about features, there is reverse wireless charging too.
S23 FE does not have a charger as well, in case you are wondering. Using a 25P PD+PPS wholesale charger is okay, because it will only pay the max charge power supported by this machine.
We tested our charging with a paired-up Samsung 25W PD/PPS charger.
For 15 minutes, the charging made a Galaxy S23 FE about 30% lighter; additional 15 provided energy for reaching almost half of capacity. It takes 84 minutes to fully charge. In our Samsung Galaxy S21 FE review, we saw the phone attain a single-core score of 794 points and multi-core scores coming in at around 2682-2720 within Geek bench 5.
Under the battery options, you will find things like Power Saving mode and Adaptive Battery (auto-sleep many apps), as well fast wired/wireless charging on/off. Lastly, There is the Protect Battery option: this will allow you to specify maximal battery charge 85% when a system keeps working for reaching prolonged battery durability.
Samsung Galaxy S23 FE Display:
There might be some change in the presentation laws, however: whereas leaks suggested the S21 FE would have a 6.41in display (though when it came to both production and recycled image displays) this is actually marked as a new generation of panel from Samsung there was readily available; but assuming that reliable resources like Ice Universe are correct. Of course, it supports HDR10+ content.
It's not full HD, but the real resolution of 2,340 x 1,080 pixels is already more than enough these days (at almost exactly Full HD pretty high too at 403ppi). We have no data on the touch sampling except that it should be similarly 240Hz as well, seen in S21 FE.
Samsung has quoted a peak brightness of up to 1,450 nits and no other official screen performance figure was given.
Our display test results are lower than the S21 FE by a hair. We hit 451 nits with manual controls, compared to 478nits on the Exynos version. The Snapdragon topped out at 985 nits on this test and the Exynos got up to 1,007.
The screen is capable of going over 1,300 nits on a small patch of white and so the promised peak brightness at that time should be surely available with this display.
The minimum brightness at point white was only 1.6 nits.
Samsung Galaxy S23 FE Color Accuracy:
Galaxy S23 FE offers two color modes — Vivid (wide color, DCI-P3) and Natural (standard colour, sRGB). The accuracy is always very good on both screens too (either mode) average DE of 3.5 towards DCI-P3 targets and a low average den of 2.4 for general sRGB usage.
The Vivid mode is slightly cooler than Natural, but you can adjust the color temperature with an additional slider to make it look just about as neutral.
You can also adjust RGB saturation if you like doing that sort of stuff.
Samsung Galaxy S23 FE Refresh Rate:
On the Samsung Galaxy S23 FE, there are two Motion Smoothness modes: Adaptive and Standard. This is said to be the Adaptive, which automatically toggles between 60Hz and 120HZ while the Standard would remain fixed at a conservative (?)
In Adaptive mode we saw the screen run at 120Hz through-out, all of interface and any compatible apps (probably most of them), as well games that don't force 60Hz. And when the picture in static, or you are playing/streaming videos….it automatically dials itself to 60Hz.
The Always-on display is available at 60Hz as well.
The Samsung Galaxy S23 FE screen is compatible with HDR10+, this format that all popular streaming applications can use. They are happy to be of assistance with high-res HDR10 streaming on all those units, as they come Widevine L1 licensed.
Samsung Galaxy S23 FE Performance:
That said, software update should come faster since you theoretically don't need to rewrite entire firmware stacks due to chipset fragmentation currently plague Samsung's high-end phones -- galaxyc,S23-tirio excluded. The Galaxy S23 FE (and the upcoming regular and+ versions of the same device) now partakes in this fragmentation once more, with some markets receiving varying editions. The US has the Snapdragon 8 Gen 1 SoC (pictured above) while most of rest of the world gets an Exynos with MDNAs in their model names.
The Exynos 2200 of the Galaxy S22 series is from last year. It is a 4nm chip. The octa-core processor comes with one potent Cortex-X2 core clocked at up to 2.8GHz, three yet faster Cortex-A710 cores ticking at peak of 2.5 GHz and four small but power efficient A510 big. LITLE little cores juiced on a max frequency of respectively up to 80GHZ.
In short, everything here is identical to what we get in the Snapdragon 8 Gen 1 (or rather ours is), except for that Cortex-X2 Prime core now runs at up to a blistering-fast 3.0GHz.
The Exynos 2200 in question has this Eclipse 920 GPU, also developed together by Samsung and AMD but is built on the incredible RDNA2 architecture we find in their modern desktop GPUs. The Adreno 730 GPU on the Snapdragon model
Samsung is offering the Galaxy S23 FE with 8GB LPDDR5 RAM and in two storage configurations - 128GB (our model) or 256 GB.
Said chipset is still actually fairly recent, so it should be fun to revisit how it performs in benchmarks.
Performance is roughly the same on either device save for the GPU; in general, you'll see about a 5-6% performance increase with the Snapdragon model.
However, both processors are still quite competitive with the recent Dimensity 8200 Ultra and Dimensity 9000 solutions; behind slightly of a Gen2+ level on A78 efficiency. Well, obviously the SD 8 Gen 2 remains unbeatable.
Both GPUs are still among the best in the market, second only to SD 8 Gen 2 and same level as Dimensity or previous gen SD 8.
The Samsung Galaxy S23 FE certainly seems to come in two well-equipped options, both of which offer plenty power here and will be able to fry pretty much anything you throw at them with a flagship-like flamboyance for years. And that's wonderful.
However is I repeat, Many arms may be steady.
We also subjected it to the regular stress tests; and lets just say that results are not quite 'peachy'. Stability was so-so for both versions. One is the Snapdragon version with 66% stability for CPU and 46% stability GP The Exynos model was rated at 50% GPU stability and a whopping bad 58% for CPU stability associations.
The CPU scored 66percent stability on the 1-hour throttle test that is obviously one of numbers you anticipate due to this high-end chipset.
GPU stability, on the other hand is very unimpressive — 46%. After 5 minutes you will begin to see a steady drop off in performance. Obviously, as this is not the real gaming so you may get a few lags here and there in high graphics games.
The Galaxy S23 FE models both get warm, but never hot enough to matter, which makes sense given how aggressively they throttle.
On one side, the Galaxy S23 FE has all muscle it needs to be a proper gaming rig however without any sort of cooling at disposal, you will have to either set yourself up for disappointment or drop them graphic settings really low.
Samsung Galaxy S23 FE Software:
The Galaxy S23 FE runs on Snapdragon -powered with Android 13, narrowed down to a5.1 version due Samsung Android personalized by of Type two skin Community Just One UI 6 with Android 14 in a few weeks as well. Samsung has also guaranteed “up to” 4 years of OS upgrades and a maximum of 5 years’ worth security patches.
One UI 6 based on Android 14 runs out of the box. By integrating both a Galaxy S23 and an FE in its model number, it seems all but confirmed that Samsung has three households (and at least three approach
Nevertheless, you would be getting the same UI as more expensive Galaxy models and also support for DeX.
You have the option to select a clock style of Always-on Display or you can choose an Image Clock. Music info is also supported. They can be set to always-off, always-on as an AMOLED screen saver of sorts, scheduled based on the hours you use phone and/or shown only when new notifications are available or tap-to-show for short period 10s.
Most people will likely never even need face unlock thanks to an under-display fingerprint reader, but you can use it if you want as a secondary or alternative method. In some cases, this can be more convenient as well but it's usually insecure being that only the selfie camera is being used. The still displays the fingerprint icon, or not depending on your preference and you can have it shown by itself always, or only after waking up the screen.
The simple basics feel like a routine experience as always, everything is accessible: the app drawer, notification shade, recent apps view (although it looks a little different), lock screen and home screen business as usual.
Accent color requiring you to only select your wallpaper and system generating the accent-color palette for it, gives us plenty of different combinations so that will also be applied on app icons.
Users can now stack widgets, and you can easily swipe between stacked widgets. Note that not all the widgets will be supported as stackable but I guess app developers might have to work around it in no time.
A Galaxy mode and routines feature that also mimics Apple's Focus. This is a mode that you can choose according to what most interests us and do some actions, change the sound profile display settings notifications And so on. For example, you can have it activate DND mode and open up Spotify automatically when launching the driving Routines profile. You can also initiate specific Routines at your discretion such as turning the hotspot/ airplane mode off.
A few of the proprietary Samsung features we've seen before return such as the Edge panels - which appear when you swipe in from their respective edge and list various tools or shortcut to apps and contacts. The game launcher that (finally) consolidates all your games in one place—and lets you set limits for gaming on the side—is here to stay, too.
The phone includes a Galaxy app and Samsung Internet (the company's own web browser). There is also an option for split screen multitasking.
Samsung also improved how a phone connects with nearby peripherals. Under the Connected devices sub-menu is where you can perform your screen castings (Smart View) or Samsung DeX if applicable. In the case of audio streaming, this is true even dialing in a Chromecast The quick panel shows nearby Chromecasts when sound is played from your phone.
When you project the screen of your phone to somewhere like a TV, for instance, it will suppress notifications so people can't read sensitive information off your handset.
One UI 5.1 also adds 'Continue browsing on PC', if you are using Samsung's Internet mobile web browser, it lets your direct the hand-off of a sort to your desktop default web browser
Samsung Galaxy S23 FE Speakers:
For various reasons, I suspect the bottom-firing earpiece is slightly louder and quite a bit bassier than this top one on my test unit when playing back video or making voice calls.
The sound balance is a good one as well, and we actually have nothing but great impressions of it.
Galaxy S23 FE speakers did very well and scored a Very Good mark on our loudness test, which is quite the improvement over Good rated of Galaxy S21 FE. You can also hear the difference. Its new speakers sound better, richer and deeper output with more bass, improved vocals too along with decent high-frequency presentation.
Samsung Galaxy S23 FE Conclusion:
Samsung Galaxy S23 FE is a terrible name but it could still be a late bloomer once the price becomes right That might be why this late Galaxy S22 FE demands attention: a dual-glass design, an OLED display we enjoy looking at and using, decent enough performance for virtually every task I threw its way consistently good cameras (we'll get to those again in a bit), awesome speakers, flagship software.
We appreciated the dual-glass design, and we like some of the new colors. We wish it were both smaller and lighter, but at 9.6 ounces with broad bezels around the edges, even as large tablets go this one is a bit of a porker yes, believe it or not we're declaring that about tablet; Sony's new Xperia Z tab weighs almost exactly half that amount--and that version should have an inch (give or take) of diagonal to spare on Samsung biggest. Nevertheless, the S23 FE is reproduced in a traditional type that we think loads will certainly favor.
The Galaxy S23 FE showcases a crisp, bright HDR10+ streaming 6.4-inch OLED display running at 120Hz. It has a tiny punch hole as well. Oh, and the display can be fairly color accurategalement.
We especially enjoyed the bump up in volume and quality from last year's speakers.
Unieke camera kwaliteit: van 3x telelens tot ultragroothoek, hoof camera en ultra-kleine selfie-mode This also works on any photos and videos, round the clock. I like the colorful brightness of an Uh LED screen and Samsung's quality control so I rank them at top otherwise Android custom UI are basically same, in terms of processing speed.
On one hand, the chipset is very powerful and still flagship-grade with it’s for example GPU stability nothing to be proud of making it not optimal solution for gaming. The battery life is not the best, either especially when it comes to gaming.
So, the Galaxy S23 FE is a great all-rounder smartphone quite like being branded as one of those flagship-killers although 1 year too late.
This content was last updated on 05 December 2024.