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

Samsung’s next foldables may have leaked straight from its own software

Samsung’s own software reveals a wider foldable is on the way

Add as a preferred source on Google
Leaked render of Samsung Galaxy Z Fold 8.
Android Headlines

Samsung’s Galaxy phones rarely stay hidden until launch. Leaks often reveal renders, specs, and software clues months before Unpacked. The same now appears to be happening with the Galaxy Z Fold 8 and Samsung’s rumored Z Fold 8 Wide, which have reportedly appeared inside a One UI 9 build.

According to Android Authority, images of two unreleased Samsung foldables were found inside a One UI 9 build. One is reportedly the Galaxy Z Fold 8, listed under the codename Q8, while the other is the Z Fold 8 Wide, listed as H8. Samsung has not announced either device, so these details should still be treated as leaks rather than confirmed information.

Is Samsung’s wide foldable finally breaking away from the usual Fold design?

The Z Fold 8 Wide is the more noticeable device in the leak. The software image reportedly shows a shorter and wider body, a squat cover display, and a rear camera design that appears similar to the Galaxy S25 Edge. That description lines up with the renders shared by Android Headlines.

Recommended Videos

Earlier reports have claimed that Samsung’s wide foldable could feature a 7.6-inch inner OLED display, a 5.4-inch cover screen, a wider 4:3-style layout, a Snapdragon 8 Elite Gen 5 chip, and a dual-cell battery with around 4,800mAh typical capacity. The device has also been rumored to support magnetic Qi2 charging.

Will the Galaxy Z Fold 8 bring bigger upgrades under the hood?

The Galaxy Z Fold 8 appears to be a more familiar update. The leaked software image reportedly shows a device that looks very close to the Galaxy Z Fold 7, which matches previous unofficial renders suggesting only minor exterior changes. Earlier leaks have pointed to a 5,000mAh battery and 45W wired charging, two upgrades that would address common complaints about Samsung’s book-style foldables.

While the Galaxy Z Flip 8 was not spotted in the One UI 9 images mentioned in this leak, Samsung is still expected to launch its next clamshell foldable alongside the Fold 8 lineup around July. Recent reports suggest the Flip 8 may be a smaller upgrade on the battery front, with Samsung expected to keep a 4,300mAh battery and 25W wired charging. That would leave one of the Flip series’ older compromises in place, especially as rival flip phones like the Razr Ultra 2026 continue pushing larger batteries and faster charging.

Sudhanshu Kumar Mangalam
I’ve got about 4 years of experience, mostly covering gaming, PC hardware, and smartphones. In my free time, I like…
Infamous “Apple copycat” offers an ingenious smartphone battery upgrade that Apple must copy
Xiaomi’s battery upgrade program is exactly what old iPhones need
The Xiaomi 13 Ultra held like a camera.

Xiaomi has long been accused of taking inspiration from Apple. But this time around, the inspiration needs to move the other way. The company has expanded its paid battery upgrade program in China to cover the Xiaomi 13, Xiaomi 13 Pro, and Xiaomi 13 Ultra.

Unlike a typical battery replacement, where a company simply swaps the worn-out cells with the same capacity, Xiaomi is offering larger batteries that give older phones a boost in endurance.

Read more
Apple coughs up $250 million to pay iPhone users because Siri just wasn’t smart enough
Siri’s big AI glow-up is late, and it's costing Apple a lot
Siri finding flight details from email app

Apple’s long-delayed Siri upgrade is no longer just an embarrassing AI setback, as the company has agreed to a very real, very hefty settlement. The company is paying $250 million to settle a class-action lawsuit alleging it misled iPhone buyers in the US about the AI-powered Siri features announced as part of Apple Intelligence.

According to the Financial Times, the case centers on Apple’s promise of a more personalized Siri that was first shown at WWDC 2024 and promoted alongside newer iPhones.

Read more
Google is adopting a new framework to stop shady Android apps from raising hell
Android’s next security trick is a public record for official apps
iPhone screen showing a folder with all of the Google apps.

Android security is getting another layer of accountability, and it's aimed squarely at a problem that digital signatures can't solve. Google has announced that it is expanding Binary Transparency across the Android ecosystem. Starting with the production of Google apps for Android and Mainline modules, the company will log official releases on a public append-only ledger, which should make it easier to verify whether the software running on a device is the exact version Google intended to release.

Why digital signatures no longer cut it

Read more