Leaker Evan Blass has shared a set of spinning GIFs of Samsung’s midrange Galaxy A56 that present the cellphone in 4 colours and a bunch of various angles. The Galaxy A56 is rumored to launch in March, proper across the similar time as rival units from Apple and Google.
The new animations from evleaks present the A56 in silver, pink, black, and a pale inexperienced. They present a cellphone with flat edges, a chunky show bezel that’s thicker on the backside, and a redesigned digicam island that mounts the three lenses along with a black backing. The opposite issues that stand out — actually — are the ability and quantity buttons, which now sit on an island that rises barely out from the cellphone’s edge, relatively than mendacity flush.
As for the specs, we’re not fairly as sure. An early Geekbench score believed to belong to the A56 suggests it will likely be powered by Samsung’s personal Exynos 1580 chipset. Certification leaks level to a 5,000mAh battery and 45W wired charging — which might be somewhat stunning solely as a result of the flagship Galaxy S25 continues to be restricted to slower 25W speeds. GalaxyClub reviews that the rear cameras can be just like the final two generations, with a 50 megapixel principal shooter joined by a 12MP ultrawide and 5MP macro, although the selfie digicam is no less than getting an improve to a brand new 12MP sensor.
The Galaxy A56 is more likely to arrive alongside extra reasonably priced A36 and A26 fashions. Samsung launched the last four generations in mid-March, in order that’s once we’re anticipating to see these telephones too. The large query for the A56 is whether or not it can launch Stateside; we have been largely followers of the $449 Galaxy A54 two years in the past, however the A55 skipped the US totally.
This 12 months Samsung might need to guarantee it has a presence within the US market. Apple is predicted to announce a brand new model of its equally priced iPhone SE both this week or subsequent, and Google’s midrange Pixel 9a has additionally been tipped for a March launch, months sooner than prior generations’ summer time bulletins.