Samsung Galaxy A50 price in India starts at Rs. 19,990 z724t
Samsung completely lost its grip over the budget market in the past few years as Chinese rivals, most notably Xiaomi, swooped in. These companies continue to release model after model with each new generation bringing even more incredible features and specifications to every price point. Finally, Samsung has decided to strike back with its new M-series and the reimagined A-series. In just the past month or so, the company has launched six new low-cost models with enough variants to strike ten major price points between Rs. 7,990 and Rs. 22,990.
We liked what we saw from the Review), for the most part. As the first two models of this new wave, these phones set the pace with a number of hot features including large screens with waterdrop notches, generous amounts of RAM and storage, multiple cameras, and large batteries.
Now, the Galaxy M30, but at each tier they add a few conveniences and features that buyers might consider stepping up to.
Today, we're reviewing the new top-of-the-line Samsung Galaxy A50. It promises quite a few features that could tempt buyers, including an in-display fingerprint sensor and three rear cameras, but at a higher price than any of the current M-series models. Let's get started.
The main attraction of the Galaxy A50 is its 6.4-inch Super AMOLED screen. This is the same size and type used on the Review) look old-school.
One feature that is exclusive to the Galaxy A50 is the in-display fingerprint sensor. Unfortunately it isn't the same Review), but that would have been expecting far too much at this price point. It's something that s will love showing off and could be a big selling point in this price segment, but we'll talk about it more later in this review.
MWC 2019 has not been launched in India, at least not yet.
The rear of our black review unit was more like a translucent grey with an irredescent quality to it that makes light refract into rainbow patterns. You'll see this especially at the edges of the phone when you move it around under strong light. Unfortunately the surface is very glossy and so it gets completely smudged pretty much the moment you touch it. After using our review unit very carefully with its bundled plastic case for a few days, we still noticed a few tiny little scratches.
The vertically stacked triple camera module in the upper left corner sticks out just a little bit. This is one design touch that has carried over from previous models, most notably the Review). There's an LED flash right below the cameras, and if you look very closely you'll see a faint Samsung logo and some regulatory text on the rear of the Galaxy A50 as well.
The power and volume buttons on the right are reasonably within reach, and there's a USB Type-C port as well as a 3.5mm headphones socket and a speaker grille on the bottom. The dual-SIM tray with its dedicated microSD card slot is on the upper left. Some buyers will be disappointed that there's no room for a notification LED on the front of this phone but the Super AMOLED s an always-on mode so you can still check notifications and alerts at a glance. By default, you have to tap the screen lightly to show this information but you can enable a true always-on mode from within the Settings app.
As far as comfort goes, the Galaxy A50 is quite easy to use and doesn't feel too heavy or thick at all. It fits nicely in one hand and isn't slippery. Reaching all corners of the screen with one thumb is a bit of a stretch, but it wasn't uncomfortable for us. We think anyone who buys this phone will be happy with how it looks and feels.
The Galaxy M10 and M20 were criticised by some of our readers for their bare-bones retail packages, and Samsung seems to have heard them. The slightly more Galaxy A50's retail box does include a headset and a plastic slip case in addition to a SIM eject pin, 15W charger, and USB Type-C cable (the latter two in black, interestingly).
It's a little difficult to differentiate all the Galaxy M-series and A-series models and variants. The Galaxy A50 has a 6.4-inch full-HD+ 1080x2340-pixel Super AMOLED which is shared with some of its siblings, as we've pointed out, but its octa-core Exynos 7904 that the others use.
This chip has four ARM Cortex-A73 and four Cortex A-53 U cores running at up to 2.3GHz and 1.6GHz respectively, to balance processing power and battery efficiency, along with a modern ARM Mali-G72 MP3 GPU. Samsung touts this SoC's image signal processor and for deep learning algorithms to power features like single-camera depth sensing and face recognition.
There are two variants of the Galaxy A50, and the only difference between them is RAM. You can choose between 4GB and 6GB, but storage is the same at 64GB between the two, at least for the options launched in India as of now. This is a bit of a surprise, especially considering that the less expensive Galaxy M30 has a 128GB option (and both models have the same price gap of Rs. 3,000 between variants).
Incidentally, 128GB was listed as an option when the Galaxy A50 was first unveiled at MWC 2019, so other countries might still get better specs. The 4000mAh battery is smaller than the 5000mAh unit that the Galaxy M30 has. These factors might confuse buyers a bit. You also get Bluetooth, Wi-Fi, FM radio, LTE and VoLTE on both SIMs, and the usual sensors.
It's very interesting that while the Galaxy M-series ships with Android 8.1 and Samsung's older Experience UI skin, the very similar Galaxy A50 runs Android 9 with the new One UI. This is good news, since s won't have to wait an unknown amount of time to get a major update. During our review period, we received an update to the February 2019 Android security patch.
One UI is generally an improvement in of design, and it does look quite modern. Samsung says it has focused on usability on phones with large screens, but what that means is it has reduced information density throughout and made text and icons everywhere enormous, with loads of padding between elements.
Some things, such as the quick settings , are now oversized so that icons are closer to the bottom of the screen where your thumbs are likely to be. It takes a bit of time to get used to. In some instances, it can feel as though screen space is being wasted, but on the other hand there are super useful touches like the Back button in the Settings app coming down within reach as you scroll rather than being anchored to the top-left corner of the screen.
We found that we were happier increasing the density of the icon grids for the home screens and the app drawer and reducing the default text size. You can disable the app drawer and also choose whether to open it with a swipe or by tapping an icon. An optional swipe downwards anywhere on the home screen can pull down the notifications shade. There are several customisation options within various sub-menus of the Settings app that are well worth digging to find.
(L-R) Quick settings toggles in the notification shade are moved lower to be within reach; replying to a text message in a pop-up window; multiple background effects in Live Focus mode
Night Mode is a dark theme, not the usual blue light filter (which is also still there). You can have it on all the time, schedule it, or sync it to sunrise and sunset for each day. You can reorder the Android navigation buttons or hide them and use swipe gestures instead (though Android 9's swipeable Home button isn't an option). FaceWidgets are useful lock screen modules for things like music controls, a calendar schedule overview, and the weather, and they'll stay visible on the always-on screen if you choose.
Some of Samsung's wallpapers appear to have been designed deliberately to cover up the camera notch at the top. Samsung's Themes app is one of a few that ask for permission before sending you spammy notifications. There are loads of free and paid themes that you can .
There are a few handy gestures including one that captures a screenshot if you swipe inwards from either side of the screen using the edge of your palm. You can have message alerts show up as bubbles, and tapping them will open the respective app in a floating window so you can see the whole thread while typing a response.
Google's Samsung Pay Mini for UPI money transactions.
We had a huge problem with spammy notifications and ads on the lock screen with the Galaxy M-series. This is still an issue with the Galaxy A50, although the initial setup process does let you choose to disable “lock screen stories”. The default Samsung apps are still spammy and now there's Amazon Shopping in addition to Dailyhunt, several of Samsung's own apps, Microsoft Office and LinkedIn, and of course Google's apps.
Shortly after getting started with our device we were tricked into tapping a notification asking us to complete the setup process. This turned out to be from a background app called IronSource which sneakily installed six spammy and unnecessary apps – these were Calculator, myTuner Radio and Flashlight (the phone already has these functions), HotSpotShield VPN, ShareChat, and Candy Crush Saga. Needless to say, even the dead-simple Flashlight app showed multiple ads including full-screen interstitials blocking the one toggle button on screen – its sole function. This is a continuing disappointment.
Samsung is heavily promoting the Galaxy A50's Super AMOLED screen and it really is crisp, bright and vibrant. Blacks are deep and colours really pop, but without being oversaturated. Everything looks great, right from the UI to videos and games. The always-on display feature is nice to have, and you can set up a schedule so it doesn't annoy you at night.
As for sound quality, this phone's single speaker can get very loud but isn't very clear. Music and voices are grating at high volumes, and while you can use it for the occasional video clip, don't expect to enjoy a full movie. The included headset isn't very comfortable, and the large Y-splitter dangled just below our right ear, leaving the long wire to the left earbud bunching up around our chin. Sound isn't too bad, but highs are a bit shrill and there's barely any bass. The open design lets a lot of background noise in and broadcasts whatever you're listening to for people around you to hear. We would much rather use our own budget earphones.
The in-display fingerprint sensor will be a big draw for a lot of people, but it does have its downsides. Recognition is fairly slow, and it often took two seconds or more for the phone to unlock itself, which is just enough to be mildly irritating. You can actually unlock the phone with even when it's in standby, but it will take trial and error to learn exactly where to place your finger. A single tap will light up the spot you need to hit, which might actually save you some time. We didn't have trouble with accuracy but recognition can fail if you don't touch the sensor long enough.
There's also face recognition, which can be a lot quicker. You can choose to activate the front camera as soon as you raise the phone. It's more fluid and you don't have to wait for visual confirmation that it has worked.
General day-to-day usage was fine, with no hiccups or slowdowns. Our review unit was the version with 4GB of RAM and were were happy, but you might want to spend the Rs. 3,000 more for the 6GB RAM variant if think you'll hang on to this phone for many years. There were ads in some Samsung apps and spammy notifications to deal with, but beyond that, our time using the Galaxy A50 was pleasant. We played PUBG Mobile and Asphalt 9: Legends at their high settings and weren't disappointed.
The Exynos 9610 processor isn't setting any records but it's competent for this price level. Benchmark tests showed performance in line with most of our current picks for the best phones under Rs. 20,000, though several of these options cost way less. AnTuTu gave us a score of 145,408 and Geekbench's single-core and multi-score test results were 1,719 and 5,586 respectively. 3DMark's Sling Shot Extreme score was 1,269, and we also got 37fps and 22fps in GFXBench's T-rex and Manhattan tests respectively.
Battery life can easily stretch to a day and a half with normal use. We took lots of photos and videos, streamed a movie, played a few games, and surfed the Web throughout the day. We started in the morning, and had about 30 percent left at night. Our HD video loop test ran for 14 hours, 59 minutes which is quite good. The included charger took us up from zero to 11 percent in about 10 minutes, and 30 percent in 30 minutes.
The Samsung Galaxy A50 does boast of a lot of photography features, staring with the triple-camera module on the rear. The primary camera has a 25-megapixel sensor and f/1.7 aperture; the secondary camera is for wide shots and has an 8-megapixel sensor with a 123-degree field of view and f/2.2 aperture; and the third one is a standard 5-megapixel depth sensor. The single front-facing camera has a 25-megpixel sensor and f/2.0 aperture.
Samsung also touts a Live Focus mode for portraits, a 480fps 720p slow-motion video mode, Hyper-Lapse mode for timelapse videos, AR emojis, and intelligent scene optimisation. The Pro mode is disappointing with only metering, ISO, white balance, and exposure compensation controls. You can switch between the standard and wide-angle cameras before you begin shooting videos, but not while recording.
Samsung Galaxy A50 standard camera (above) and wide-angle camera (below). Tap to see full-sized images.
You can change the type of background blur in portrait shots from the standard bokeh to assorted filter effects, and there's even a fake dolly-zoom effect that you can make GIFs out of. Sadly, this only separates the background and zooms it in and out, without the distinctive perspective warping effect of a camera's field of view changing in motion. Edge detection was quite good, but the background between our subjects' torsos and arms was not identified.
The app is easy to use and is pretty much the same as what we've seen on previous Samsung phones including the Galaxy A9 (2018). It's well laid out with useful controls within reach. You can choose whether the app re the mode you were using last, and enable a floating shutter button if you often find the usual one out of reach. The Galaxy A50 s the high-efficiency HEIF and HEVC formats for photos and videos, but these are not enabled by default. Video recording with the front and rear cameras only goes up to 2336x1080 (full-HD but extended in width to match the aspect ratio of the phone's display).
We were generally happy with the photos that the Galaxy A50 took. It tended to overexpose brightly lit parts of a frame in the daytime, but most of our photos came out looking good with quite a lot of detail. The wide-angle camera gives you a lot of flexibility and it's actually quite surprising how much more you can fit into a frame when standing in exactly the same spot, but quality is definitely lower and there's major distortion that isn't just limited to the edges of the frame.
Tap to see full-sized Samsung Galaxy A50 camera samples
Performance at night was decent, but not great. Photos might look good on the phone's own screen and when posted online, but they don't really hold up when examined at full size. There can be some motion blurring due to the shutter staying open a bit too long. If there's enough light around, close-ups taken at night are fairly good.
Videos shot while we were standing still came out looking great, with none of the focus hunting or wobbling that affects lower-end phone cameras. In the daytime, motion was crisp and details were good. The wide-angle camera gives everything a fish-eye effect and video is slightly darker but still smooth. There's no official mention of video stabilisation but we found that footage was still very usable. At night, things were a lot shakier and videos did not have much detail. The secondary camera produced dark, blotchy video.
The front camera also has a Live Focus mode but without the effects. You can still change the blur intensity after taking a shot, but edge detection isn't great. The default beautification makes shots look quite artificial, and turning it off requires multiple taps.
Samsung Galaxy A50 in pictures
Verdict
Unfortunately for Samsung, the Galaxy A50 with its starting price of Rs. 19,990 competes with Review) which features the top-end Qualcomm Snapdragon 845 processor. That's obviously the better choice of phone if you're a gamer or want the smoothest possible experience, but it doesn't have three rear cameras or a modern all-screen design.
As aggressive as Samsung is, it has been rather upstaged by the brand new starting price of Rs. 13,999 and even the higher-end variant at Rs. 16,999 (with 128GB of storage) undercuts Samsung dramatically.
Another big competitor to the Samsung Galaxy A50 will be the company's own Galaxy M30, which has the same screen and a larger battery, but a weaker processor, standard fingerprint sensor, and a less flashy rear . If you aren't too fussed about camera quality, the Galaxy M30 starts for Rs. 5,000 less.
Even with these alternatives in the market, we think a lot of people will find the Galaxy A50 interesting enough to consider seriously. It has all the current-day features that you'd want to show off, and there are no major problems. We think there's scope for improvement with the cameras and software, but overall, Samsung is really showing that it knows how to bring the fight back.
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