How is the Design of the Samsung Galaxy F22?

Shaurya Sharma
2 min readJul 21, 2021

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If you follow smartphone launches closely like me, you would know that Samsung just released Galaxy M32. Compare M32 and Galaxy F22 and you will not be able to tell them apart when it comes to their appearance. Both the phones have glossy but gradient back panels with parallel lines passing through the top and bottom of the panel.

The front is a glass (of course) with a plastic back panel and frame with an overall weight of 203 grams mostly due to the fact that Galaxy A22 packs in a 6,000 mAh battery. The phone is bulky, to be honest, and with 9.3m thickness, the phone still maintains usability thanks to the curved edges that go on both the front and back panel.

There are not many bells and whistles that you will find on Galaxy A22. Its square-camera setup sits on the top-left corner and protrudes a bit above the back panel as usual. The front of the phone has a giant display with decently sized bezels, a dewdrop-shaped notch, and a thick chin on-board.

When it comes to I/O ports and buttons, there’s a power button cum side-mounted fingerprint scanner on the right along with a volume rocker on top of it. There’s a SIM card tray on the top-left corner. A 3.5mm headphone jack, a bottom-firing loudspeaker, a primary microphone, and a USB-C 2.0 port are at the bottom of the device.

Samsung Galaxy F22 packs in a giant 6.4-inch Super AMOLED 90hz panel with a 20:9 aspect ratio. Since the device arrived after A22, Galaxy F22’s display is identical to A22 and not the other way around. The display has a 720 by 1600 pixels resolution and it is rated to produce 600 nits of brightness in HDR mode.

It’s an HD+ display on a sub-15K smartphone and F22 shares its specifications similar to A22 including its display. Unlike Galaxy A22 which should have gone for an FHD+ panel, Galaxy F22 is cheaper and thus, getting an HD+ display makes sense. Although it does come with a pretty good Mediatek Helio G80 chipset that is good enough for daily usage.

It’s a Super AMOLED panel which means you get the best of display tech on board. It is rich in colour and they do really punch out. Viewing angles are great so you won’t have any problem viewing the display from any angle unless you point the display horizontally to the eye level.

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Shaurya Sharma
Shaurya Sharma

Written by Shaurya Sharma

Pop culture whiz. Social Media junkie. Web guru. Unapologetic Trash TV connoisseur. I write more than I read. Talk to me about all things Tech.

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