8.0
Score

Pros

  • 7.6" 120 Hz inner display
  • Full‑size 6.2" cover screen
  • Stereo speakers, 5G, Wi‑Fi 6
  • Refined hinge with Flex Mode
  • 12 GB RAM multitasking muscle

Cons

  • No S Pen, no microsd slot
  • Cameras are merely “good”
  • Still eye‑watering expensive
  • Heavy (282 g) & no water seal
Value
6
Battery
8
Camera
7
Display
9.5
Software
8
Performance
9

Final Verdict

If you crave bleeding‑edge tech and live in apps that thrive on screen real estate—think Outlook + Teams, Adobe Rush, Xbox Game Pass—the Galaxy Z Fold 2 is the foldable champ to buy used or on sale. Everyone else can wait for the price of brilliance to fold in half.

The Galaxy Z Fold 2 is Samsung’s second‑generation tablet‑phone hybrid: a 7.6‑inch 120 Hz Dynamic AMOLED that folds in half yet slips into a pocket. It costs a breathtaking $1,999, but after ten days of living, gaming and working on it, I can finally answer the question that matters: is the experience worth two grand?

“This year it feels ripe—ready for anyone brave (and flush) enough to jump in.”


Samsung Galaxy Z Fold 2 Cover Display Upgrade (6.2‑inch)

Last year’s 4.6‑inch porthole is gone. The Z Fold 2 greets you with a full‑size 6.2‑inch cover display that finally behaves like a normal phone. Samsung’s redesign fixes the single biggest complaint reviewers levelled at the original Fold.

One‑Hand Usability on the New Foldable Phone

ChangeGalaxy Fold 1Galaxy Z Fold 2
Cover display4.6″ @ 60 Hz6.2″ @ 60 Hz
BezelsHuge chin & foreheadAll‑screen with a punch‑hole
One‑hand useCrampedComfortable

You can fire off texts, scroll socials and pay with NFC without ever opening the hinge—crucial for moments when flipping open a tablet feels obnoxious or unsafe.


120 Hz Inner Screen on Galaxy Z Fold 2: Tablet‑Size Display

Flip the magnesium‑alloy hinge, and a 7.6‑inch, 2208 × 1768 Dynamic‑AMOLED greets you at 120 Hz. Scrolling Gmail, Reddit or Chrome is as buttery as an S24 Ultra; games such as Dead Cells and cloud‑streamed titles from Xbox Game Pass really flex the refresh rate.

Crease Visibility: Does the Foldable Screen Seam Matter?

Crease check? It’s there, visible off‑angle, but your thumbs stop noticing after an hour. If the crease is all you see, you need better content—movies, spreadsheets, and multi‑pane apps quickly drown it out.

Galaxy Z Fold 2 drag and drop multitasking
Dragging Chrome into a three‑up split—true desktop‑style workflow on Android

Galaxy Z Fold 2 Hinge & Build Quality: Flex Mode Explained

Samsung replaced last year’s plastic OLED with Ultra Thin Glass, reinforced the “sweeper” hinge and narrowed the gap. Durability tests, where dirt was tossed into the mechanism, showed fewer particles creeping inside.

  • Mystic Bronze or Mystic Black
  • 282 g—heavier than a Note 20 but lighter than it looks
  • No IP rating—keep it dry.

Durability vs. Galaxy Fold 1 (Sweeper Hinge Test)

The CAM hinge now locks at angles from 75° to 115°, enabling Flex Mode tripod‑like use for video calls and long‑exposure photos.

Fold 1 vs Fold 2 hinge gap
Fold 2 (top‑right) narrows the hinge gap versus Fold 1 (top‑left) (Image 2).

Samsung Galaxy Z Fold 2 Software & Multitasking (One UI 5)

Samsung’s One UI folds Android into a desktop‑lite powerhouse. Split‑screen three‑app layouts, floating windows and App Pairs (saved two‑ or three‑app combos) make the big screen more than a party trick.

App Pair, Drag‑and‑Drop & Split‑Screen Tricks

  • Only a subset of apps honour Flex Mode.
  • Layouts occasionally reset when you reopen the phone.
  • Learning curve: dragging icons to zones isn’t intuitive for newcomers.

Still, once muscle‑memory kicks in, nothing rivals answering Gmail while watching YouTube and scrolling Reddit—all without switching contexts.

Galaxy Z Fold 2 split‑screen productivity
Twitch stream, chat replay and Reddit simultaneously—laptop‑like multitasking

Performance & Battery Life on Galaxy Z Fold 2 (Snapdragon 865+)

Driven by the Snapdragon 865 + 5G and 12 GB RAM, the Fold 2 never once closed a background app in my tests. Geekbench 6 scores rival current upper‑midrange flagships; sustained gaming runs ~5 °C hotter than a Note 20 but below throttle thresholds.

MetricResult
Geekbench 6 (multi‑core)3 730
3DMark Wild Life6 200
PCMark Work battery (120 Hz adaptive)9 h 22 m

Gaming Benchmarks on Samsung’s Foldable Flagship

Dual stereo speakers get loud—enough to fill a small room, though hand‑placement can muffle them. The 4 500 mAh cell comfortably clears a full day (≈5 h SOT). 25 W wired charging nets 0–100 % in 85 min; 11 W wireless tops up overnight.

Galaxy Z Fold 2 gaming quality
Dead Cells at 120 Hz (left) vs. 1080p animation playback (right)

Camera Review: Triple 12 MP Setup on Samsung Galaxy Z Fold 2

Triple 12 MP rear array (wide / ultra‑wide / 2× telephoto) plus 10 MP punch‑hole selfies front and inside. Shots are solid, vibrant and social‑ready, but don’t beat an S21 Ultra’s reach.

Flex Mode Photography and Hands‑Free Video Calls

No S Pen support—the soft UTG wouldn’t survive stylus pressure. Rumours point to pen‑friendly glass in future generations, so digital artists should wait.

Galaxy Z Fold 2 flex mode camera
Flex Mode turns the Fold 2 into its own tripod for hands‑free shots

Galaxy Z Fold 2 Price in 2025: Is the $1,999 Foldable Worth It?

At launch, the Fold 2 cost $1,999. Samsung permanently cut it to $1,799, and holiday deals dip to $999 refurb. Even discounted, it remains a luxury. Competitors like the Pixel Fold and OnePlus Open now offer waterproofing or better cameras for similar money—but neither matches Samsung’s mature multitasking suite.

Fold 2 vs. Fold 3 vs. Pixel Fold: Value Comparison

If you’re looking for a wallet-friendly foldable, the Galaxy Z Fold 3 adds IPX8 water resistance and S Pen support for roughly the same price today. Still, Fold 2 stands as a milestone—the first foldable I’d trust for daily work.


Internal Links


Verdict: Who Should Buy the Samsung Galaxy Z Fold 2?

Samsung trimmed the fat, widened the cover display and cranked refresh to 120 Hz. The result is a futuristic communicator that finally feels practical. It still costs more than a gaming laptop, but it also replaces your phone, e‑reader and small tablet.