• 2 min read
Galaxy Z Fold 8 looks broader in new renders before launch
Samsung’s Galaxy Z Fold 8 is already doing the pre-launch publicity circuit, and the latest Galaxy Z Fold 8 renders put it side by side with the Galaxy S26 Ultra in both folded and unfolded form. The comparison makes one

Image: ixbt.com
Samsung’s Galaxy Z Fold 8 is already doing the pre-launch publicity circuit, and the latest Galaxy Z Fold 8 renders put it side by side with the Galaxy S26 Ultra in both folded and unfolded form. The comparison makes one thing obvious: Samsung is leaning harder into a wider cover screen, the kind of change that could make the phone feel less like a tiny tablet pretending to be a handset.
The new images show a folded device that looks more compact next to the Galaxy S26 Ultra, while the open version stretches into a large inner display aimed at multitasking, video, and juggling more than one app at a time. That is not a radical reinvention, but it is the sort of design tuning foldable buyers have been asking for since the first generation: less awkwardness outside, more room inside.
Galaxy Z Fold 8 render changes
Another render focuses on the two screens themselves, making the size difference and aspect ratio shift easier to see. Both displays have a front camera in a punch-hole cutout, which is a familiar choice rather than a headline-grabbing one, but at least it avoids another round of selfie-camera compromise theater.
The official debut of the Galaxy Z Fold 8 series is expected on 22 July. If these leaks are accurate, Samsung is not betting on a dramatic visual overhaul so much as a more usable shape – and that may be enough to keep the foldable formula from feeling stale while rivals keep pushing thinner, lighter alternatives.

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Gadgets Editor
Eli is obsessed with the tangible future. He reviews phones, wearables, and everything with a battery. Known for his rigorous testing protocols and unabashed teardowns, Eli has broken more review units than he cares to admit, all in the name of discovering the truth about durability and repairability.
via ixbt.com


