Samsung Galaxy A32 5G Leaked Renders Show Phone in Multiple Colours

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Samsung Galaxy A32 5G press renders have leaked online to suggest the design of the phone. The smartphone is visible in four colours in the renders — black, blue, white, and purple. It is possible that more colours are added before the launch. The Samsung Galaxy A32 5G is expected to come with an Infinity-V display, which, according to previous leaks, will measure 6.5 inches. Samsung Galaxy A32 5G is expected to have a side-mounted fingerprint scanner.

The press renders of the upcoming Samsung Galaxy A32 5G were shared by WinFuture. As visible in the renders, the Samsung Galaxy A32 5G is expected to get a quad rear camera setup with each sensor having its own separate cutout.

Samsung Galaxy A32 5G is speculated to be Samsung’s most affordable 5G offering of 2021. Last week, the smartphone’s support page was spotted on Samsung’s UK and Ireland websites with the model number SM-A326B/DS, hinting that the launch may be soon. Besides that, a smartphone carrying the model number SM-A325F/DS spotted on the Bureau of Indian Standards (BIS) website is believed to be the Samsung Galaxy A32 4G. So, the smartphone can be expected in India soon.

The upcoming Samsung phone is expected to feature a 6.5-inch display and measure 164.2×76.1×9.1mm. A report from July 2020 had tipped that the Samsung Galaxy A32 5G will feature a 48-megapixel primary sensor.

The smartphone was also spotted on Bluetooth SIG website recently, suggesting that it will come with Bluetooth 5.0 support. Last month, the Samsung Galaxy A32 5G was also spotted in US Federal Communications Commission (FCC) and HTML5 test listings that revealed that the phone will come with NFC, 15W fast charging support, and Android 11 out of the box. While Samsung has not said anything about the Samsung Galaxy A32 5G, the press renders along with the earlier leaks suggest that the smartphone could launch soon, probably in Q1 2021.


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, download the episode, or just hit the play button below.

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