Skip to main content
  1. Home
  2. Phones
  3. Android
  4. Mobile
  5. News

Digital Trends may earn a commission when you buy through links on our site. Why trust us?

Samsung listened to feedback, and the $699 Galaxy S20 Fan Edition is its reply

Add as a preferred source on Google

Did you tell Samsung the Galaxy S20 was too expensive, that the battery wasn’t large enough, and that the range of colors was too subdued? If so, the company has listened, and the result is the Galaxy S20 Fan Edition, also known as the Galaxy S20 FE, which launches today. In addition to addressing the issues raised above, there are some more interesting tweaks when you delve deeper in to the S20 FE’s spec sheet that make it more than a simple refresh.

Image used with permission by copyright holder

The big story here is the price drop. You’ll pay $699 U.S., or 699 British pounds, for the Galaxy S20 FE 5G version. If you live in the U.K. and have no wish to have a 5G phone and are happy with 4G, you can buy a 4G-only Galaxy S20 FE for 599 pounds (this version will not come to the U.S.). The Galaxy S20 cost $999 when it was announced in March, and even with regular discounts, it typically hung around in the high $800s range. The new entry-level S20 price means it will take on the OnePlus 8, LG Velvet, and Nokia 8.3 5G, in addition to the forthcoming Google Pixel 5.

Recommended Videos

There are six colors to choose from: Navy, red, lavender, mint, white, and a lovely orange. None of these colors will be held back as network exclusives (at least in the U.K.), and will all be available anywhere the Galaxy S20 FE is sold, so it should be relatively easy to secure the hue of your choice. The larger 4,500mAh battery, up from 4,000mAh in the Galaxy S20, should also see it last a little longer before needing a recharge too.

What else? The design has changed a little to bring the camera module inline with the Galaxy Note 20’s design, and it looks better for it. It houses a 12-megapixel f/1.8 aperture camera with optical image stabilization, a 12MP ultra-wide camera, and an 8MP telephoto camera with 3x optical zoom and a 30x hybrid zoom. This is a different camera array than the Galaxy S20, but not necessarily a worse one. The selfie camera is different too, and now has 32MP to work with.

Image used with permission by copyright holder

The screen is covered in Gorilla Glass 5, the chassis is metal, and the back is Samsung’s so-called “glasstic” material, which is plastic with a glass-like feel. That’s the same back that drew ire from fans on the Note 20, but perhaps it’s more palatable at this price point. The screen is a little larger at 6.5-inches compared to the 6.2-inch on the Galaxy S20, but with a lower resolution of 2400 x 1080 pixels. It does retain the 120Hz refresh rate and the Infinity-O hole-punch screen design.

A Qualcomm Snapdragon 865 processor powers the 5G phone, and this applies if you buy one in the U.K. too, where all Galaxy S20 phones used the Exynos 990 before. Oddly, if you buy the 4G S20 FE in the U.K., it will have the Exynos 990 chip instead. It’s joined by 6GB of RAM and 128GB of internal storage, plus a MicroSD card slot. There’s fast charging on board to take the battery to 50% in 30 minutes, plus 15W wireless charging, an IP68 water resistance rating, and an ultrasonic in-display fingerprint sensor. The software is Android 10 with Samsung’s OneUI 2.5 — and it’ll be included in Samsung’s new promise of providing three platform updates, starting with Android 11.

Ready to buy the Samsung Galaxy S20 FE? It’s up for pre-order through Samsung’s own online store, and it’ll get its full release on October 2.

Andy Boxall
Andy has written about mobile technology for almost a decade. From 2G to 5G and smartphone to smartwatch, Andy knows tech.
Fitbit is becoming Google Health, and it’s getting a bunch of wellness upgrades
Google is finally treating health tracking as a platform play, pulling in medical records, third-party fitness data, and AI coaching in a way that Fitbit's standalone app was never built to handle.
New Google Health app.

Google is officially pulling the plug on the Fitbit app, replacing it with the new Google Health app on May 19, 2026. It is quite ironic, as the company just announced a new Fitbit Air screenless fitness tracker, but the change will take place via an OTA update. 

This is happening after Fitbit’s fifteen-year run, wherein it gathered millions of fitness-focused users and provided them with various health trackers and meaningful insights via its software. 

Read more
Google’s Fitbit Air is a screenless $99 Whoop rival, and its core features don’t need a subscription
The real competitive edge Fitbit Air has is that Google separated the hardware cost from the subscription entirely, giving users something Whoop never has: a choice about whether to pay monthly at all.
Fitbit Air in all the colors.

Google just made its most serious moves yet into the fitness tracker market. The maker of the Pixel Watch has officially unveiled the Fitbit Air, a screenless health band priced at $99.99. Unlike Whoop, which locks all the fitness data behind a paywall, Fitbit Air’s core health-tracking features will remain free. 

Currently available for pre-orders, the device will start shipping across 21 countries starting May 26, 2026. You can get the tracker in four Pixel-like colors, including Obsidian, Lavender, Fog, and Berry, and choose from three different strap styles: Performance Loop, Active Band, and Elevated Modern Band. 

Read more
Android boss shoots down a Liquid Glass copyjob on Pixels, and that’s a relief
While many Android OEMs have already copied iOS 26's aesthetic, Google says Pixels are staying the course.
Image showing the UI design similarity between iPhone 16 Pro and Honor 600 Pro.

Google's president of the Android Ecosystem has shut down speculation that Android will adopt Apple's Liquid Glass design language, at least on Pixel devices. In response to a mockup of Liquid Glass on a Pixel 11 posted on X, Sameer Samat said, "Not happening. Y'all are wild." The response is welcome news for Android fans who have watched a wave of manufacturers copy Apple's aesthetic over the past year.

Several Android OEMs have already taken the bait

Read more