Samsung Galaxy A72 Alleged Renders Show 6.7 Inch Display, Same Design as Rumoured Galaxy A52
Samsung Galaxy A72 Alleged Renders Show 6.7-Inch Display, Same Design as Rumoured Galaxy A52 6r43t
Samsung Galaxy A72 was among the nine names that Samsung reportedly trademarked back in January. 4p3722
By Vineet Washington | Updated: 17 December 2020 10:59 IST
Photo Credit: Voice/ OnLeaks 51301o
Samsung Galaxy A72 may feature a 6.7-inch display
Highlights
Samsung Galaxy A72 renders shared by known tipster OnLeaks
They show a flat display with a hole-punch cutout design
Samsung Galaxy A72 does not have a release date yet
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Samsung Galaxy A72 is expected to launch early next year and alleged renders of the phone have now surfaced. It seems to come with a similar design as the Galaxy A52, the renders for which were recently shared as well. The Galaxy A72 may come with a quad rear camera setup, once again refuting original claims of the phone having a penta-camera setup. The phone is also expected to have a glastic and aluminium build. As of now, Samsung has not officially shared any information on the Galaxy A72.
The renders for the rumoured Galaxy A72 were Samsung's first phone to feature a penta-camera setup on the back.
Hemmerstoffer states that Samsung Galaxy A72 will feature a glastic back with an aluminium frame. It will come with a 6.7-inch display and the phone seems to have a 3.5mm headphone jack, a USB Type-C port, and a speaker grille at the bottom. The tipster adds the purported phone measures 165x77.4x8.1mm. The rectangular camera module on the back has a slight bump just like the Galaxy A52 and houses the flash within the module. With the camera bump included, the phone is expected to be 9.9mm thick.
Overall, the Galaxy A72 has a very similar design to the rumoured Galaxy A52 that is also expected to launch next year. Back in January, Samsung reportedly trademarked names for nine A-series phones and both the Galaxy A52 and Galaxy A72 were among them.
Is this the end of the Samsung Galaxy Note series as we know it? We discussed this on Orbital, our weekly technology podcast, which you can subscribe to via Apple Podcasts, Google Podcasts, or RSS, the episode, or just hit the play button below.