Skip to main content
  1. Home
  2. Phones
  3. Features

The Galaxy Z TriFold is laid to rest. Here’s what I want its successor to fix

Samsung's tri-fold ambition deserved better execution. Here's the blueprint for a TriFold 2 that people actually carry in their pockets.

Add as a preferred source on Google
Samsung Galaxy TriFold folding
John McCann / Digital Trends

The Samsung Galaxy Z TriFold is, by almost every measure, a phone that shouldn’t exist in the first place, and yet here we are: a massive 10-inch screen, two hinges, and a price tag that might make your wallet cry. 

Samsung knew it was a first-generation device, which is why it kept production intentionally limited, a controlled showcase of engineering ambition rather than a full market rollout. 

Recommended Videos

However, “more hits than misses” is not the bar you set for a device that costs almost as much as two or three conventional smartphones. For now, the TriFold is gone, but its successor — the Galaxy Z TriFold 2 — is reportedly on the company’s roadmap, perhaps being sketched, argued over, and stress-tested in a lab. 

SpecSamsung Galaxy Z TriFold
Display10-inch main (AMOLED, 120Hz) + 6.5-inch cover
Peak Brightness1,600 nits (main) / 2,600 nits (cover)
ChipsetSnapdragon 8 Elite for Galaxy
RAM / Storage16GB RAM / 512GB or 1TB
Rear Cameras200MP wide + 12MP ultrawide + 10MP 3x telephoto
Front Cameras10MP (cover) + 10MP (foldable screen)
Battery / Charging5,600mAh / 45W wired, 15W wireless
Ingress ProtectionIP48
Dimensions3.9–4.2mm unfolded / 12.9mm folded / 309g

5 things that the Galaxy Z TriFold 2 desperately needs to fix

When the Galaxy Z TriFold 2 arrives, it needs to arrive differently, not just as a thinner, shinier version of the current-generation foldable, but more as a phone that earns its place in more pockets. 

Here is a list of things that need to change in the Galaxy Z TriFold 2, in my frank opinion, as they could seriously make the difference between a phone people admire (from a distance) and one that they actually want to buy. 

A thinner, more durable hinge and chassis

The original TriFold’s dual-hinge system was, in my opinion, an engineering marvel, but it was also the most obvious compromise. At 12.9mm thick when folded and weighing 309 grams, the TriFold seemed gargantuan compared to Samsung’s Fold 7. For those catching up, the Fold 7 measures 8.9 mm thick and weighs just 215 grams. 

Now, I understand that two hinges will always take up more space than one, which explains the TriFold’s thickness. However, this is where the single-fold Fold 7 feels more like a polished product, and the TriFold doesn’t. The good news is that the company already knows this. 

Recent rumors suggest that Samsung is developing an “entirely new hinge solution” from the ground up for the TriFold 2, with the objective of making it meaningfully slimmer. Thinness alone, however, is not enough. If the phone wants to be considered as a daily driver, it needs to survive the brutal reality of everyday life. 

Dust, drops, the unorganized items inside a bag, and the pressure that tight jeans pockets apply on a phone: the TriFold 2 must be able to survive all of this better than the TriFold, and slimming the hinge shouldn’t come at the cost of structural integrity

PhoneTypeUnfolded ThicknessFolded ThicknessWeight
Samsung Galaxy Z TriFoldTri-fold3.9–4.2mm12.9mm309g
Huawei Mate XT UltimateTri-fold3.6-4.8mm12.8mm298g
Samsung Galaxy Z Fold 7Dual-fold4.2mm8.9mm215g
Google Pixel 10 Pro FoldDual-fold5.2mm10.8mm257g

A better ingress protection rating

The Galaxy Z TriFold shipped with an IP48 rating, the same as the Fold 7, and already better than the Huawei Mate XT (which came with an IPX8 rating without any dust protection). 

However, “better than Huawei’s Mate XT” isn’t exactly a glorifying benchmark, especially when the Pixel 10 Pro Fold has become the first foldable to achieve a full IP68 rating, the same as conventional flagships. 

For a device positioned as the pinnacle of Samsung’s engineering, an IP48 feels less assuring. The TriFold 2, in my opinion, needs to match the IP68 as a baseline, and so does the Fold 7. 

PhoneTypeIP RatingDust ProtectionWater Protection
Samsung Galaxy Z TriFoldTri-foldIP48Partial (particles over 1mm)Up to 1.5m for 30 mins
Samsung Galaxy Z Fold 7Dual-foldIP48Partial (particles over 1mm)Up to 1.5m for 30 mins
Huawei Mate XT UltimateTri-foldIPX8NoneUp to 1.5m for 30 mins
Google Pixel 10 Pro FoldDual-foldIP68Full (dust-tight)Up to 1.5m for 30 mins

Higher peak brightness for the inner display

Screen estate is the TriFold’s entire argument. It’s the reason you’re paying the premium, for the idea of fitting a large-screen foldable smartphone in your pocket (technically, you can). However, to me, it’s genuinely baffling that the phone’s main 10-inch screen peaks at just 1,600 nits, which is lesser than the Galaxy Z Fold 5’s inner screen from 2023. 

For context, the Galaxy Z Fold 7’s inner screen hits 2,600 nits, as does the Galaxy S26 Ultra, and the TriFold’s outer screen. And while these might sound like bare numbers, they’re very important when you’re using the smartphone outdoors, under direct sunlight. 

It’s the difference between holding the phone confidently in the street on a bright sunny day, and running into the shade to read the notification and replying. Given the company’s strong hold over its displays, I would really appreciate a brighter display for everyday use, on par with modern flagships and regular foldables. 

PhoneTypeInner Display BrightnessCover Display Brightness
Samsung Galaxy Z TriFoldTri-fold1,600 nits2,600 nits
Samsung Galaxy Z Fold 7Dual-fold2,600 nits2,600 nits
Google Pixel 10 Pro FoldDual-fold3,000 nits3,000 nits

A more powerful chip for better multitasking

The Galaxy Z TriFold featured the Snapdragon 8 Elite chip, which, at the time, was the most powerful smartphone chip. However, due to thermal constraints, the device ran slower than the other 8 Elite-powered smartphones, such as the S25 Ultra.

While I’m not expecting the TriFold 2 to fix that issue entirely, given that it would also feature a thin chassis with very limited space for a dedicated cooling mechanism, a chipset upgrade could surely improve multitasking, gaming, and overall responsiveness. 

This year, the TriFold 2 should feature the Snapdragon 8 Elite Gen 5 chip, the one we’ve seen on the Galaxy S26 Ultra (globally) and the S26 and S26 Plus (in the U.S., China, and Japan). Even with thermal throttling, the chipset could surely unlock a meaningful performance upgrade. 

PhoneTypeChipsetAvailability
Samsung Galaxy Z TriFoldTri-foldSnapdragon 8 Elite for GalaxyGlobal
Samsung Galaxy Z Fold 7Dual-foldSnapdragon 8 Elite for GalaxyGlobal
Samsung Galaxy S25 UltraSlabSnapdragon 8 Elite for GalaxyGlobal
Samsung Galaxy S26 UltraSlabSnapdragon 8 Elite Gen 5 for GalaxyGlobal

The TriFold 2 desperately needs better selfie cameras

The Galaxy Z TriFold’s rear camera setup is still better. A 200MP main camera, a 10MP telephoto, and a 12MP ultrawide; all of these let users fiddle with multiple perspectives and zoom levels to get the picture they want without moving around too much. Selfie cameras, however, are a slightly different story. 

The TriFold’s selfie camera setup is quite symmetrical: a 10MP (f/2.2) on the cover screen and a 10MP (f/2.2) camera on the main 10-inch foldable screen. But in my opinion, it isn’t something buyers expect to get with one of the most expensive smartphones money can buy. 

While the selfie shots might not be the problem for most buyers, I’m not even sure whether they’re looking at it from a quality perspective; it’s the software that’s doing the heavy lifting there.

I appreciate the ultrawide field of view from the inner-screen sensor, I really do, as it helps get more people in a selfie, but I sincerely want Samsung to increase the resolution for both sensors. Additionally, selfie cameras could use slightly larger sensors for better low-light performance. 

Shikhar Mehrotra
For more than five years, Shikhar has consistently simplified developments in the field of consumer tech and presented them…
Old tech keeps coming back because new tech got annoying and we miss simpler times
Dumb phones, discs, cameras, and retro consoles are cycling back because modern tech got too needy for its own good
Toned picture of retro cassette player and earphones on tabletop.

Old jeans and old sneakers get a pass because fashion is cyclical. One year something looks dead, a few years later it’s back with a better markup and a straight-faced explanation about authenticity.

I’m starting to see consumer tech the same way. The revival isn’t limited to one corner of the junk drawer, either. It’s showing up in phones, cameras, audio gear, movies, and games. A tiny camera dangling from a wrist has more personality than another glass slab taking overprocessed night-mode shots.

Read more
Oppo is building camera phones like the smartphone race never ended
Oppo Find X9 Ultra Back

The flagship smartphone race has become a little too polite, especially when it comes to mobile photography. There was a time when the conversation revolved around megapixel counts, sensor count, and wild zoom numbers. But over the last few years, that energy has cooled.

The biggest brands no longer behave like they are trying to shock the market. Companies like Apple and Samsung now focus more on refining image processing and fine-tuning the formula than on pushing camera hardware into genuinely outrageous territory.

Read more
Despite cutback rumors, Apple could still serve a performance carnival on iPhone 18
The performance gap between Apple's standard and Pro iPhones may shrink dramatically in 2026, and that's genuinely great news for most buyers.
Apple iPhone 17 Pro in Cosmic Orange next to the iPhone 17 Pro Max in Deep Blue

Apple loves keeping critics and reviewers on their toes. While we’ve heard whispers of cost-cutting on the iPhone 18 lineup, fresh supply chain intelligence from Taiwan (via Commercial Times) suggests that the company is cooking up one of its most hardware-centric upgrades in years.

At the core of the purported iPhone 18 lineup sits TSMC’s 2nm A20 chip, which is believed to be a generational leap from the 3nm process A19 series chips on the iPhone 17 and the iPhone 17 Pro models. 

Read more