This phone isn't budget by any means. It's packing features that were flagship-worthy not so long ago and there are remarkably few concessions made in order to bring the price down. If the Galaxy A series is Samsung's attempt at world domination, they're going about it the right way.
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Price
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Design
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Performance
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Camera
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Features
Somewhere at Samsung is a guy working on a pinboard with bits connected by string. He probably looks a little like Charlie Kelly from It’s Always Sunny in Philadelphia, and it’s his job to plan global smartphone domination. If Samsung’s Galaxy A52s 5G is any indication, our fictional Charlie is making himself redundant.
The Galaxy A52s (we’re going to drop the ‘5G’ now) offers a considerable amount for its R9,000 asking price. Can other companies beat it in terms of value? Sure. Poco is one such brand. The problem is that you’ve never heard of them. Samsung has the bigger… package, as it were.
Speaking their language
The back-panel, in our review phone, is plastic. But, and this is the important bit, it doesn’t look like it. You’ll have to go at the panel with a fingernail to figure out what it’s made from. The good news? That plastic panel actually manages to feel premium. Charlie’s been busy.
The SIM/microSD slot is on the top of the phone. The power and volume rocker live on the upper right side. The base is where the magic happens. This is where you’ll locate the major speaker port, the USB-C charge port, and a 3.5mm jack. There’s a fingerprint scanner in the A52s’ screen, but it’s a little close to the base for comfort. It works, though.
Watch this closely
That’s not to say the screen isn’t excellent. It is. If, as is likely, you’re planning to use this for at least some Netflix and YouTube, you’ll be well served. It’s hard to go wrong with AMOLED, as the phone is at pains to point out. Its default wallpapers and lock screen choices show off the phone to its best advantage. Samsung’s also included a touch sampling rate of 240Hz here, which will serve you even better when it comes to gaming than the 120Hz feature.
Gotta go fast
But it’s certainly speedy enough, both in the day-to-day of if you’re the sort of salivate over benchmarks. Apps are snappy, popping open at a touch. We did notice a little hesitation when first booting the phone, but that was probably just the initial setup completing in the background. Once it was up and running, we were able to swap between apps with little delay.
Which isn’t that surprising. The Galaxy A52s uses the Snapdragon 778G, the same processor that lives inside Honor’s new 50 and 60 handsets. It’s also part of Huawei, Realme, Vivo, and Oppo’s stable of upper-midrange devices, and with good reason. It’s reasonably quick, and it adds 5G.
Worth a thousand words?
There are four rear sensors here — a 64MP main, a 12MP secondary (ultrawide), and then dual 5MP lenses. These take care of depth and macro functions. As Samsung cameras go, these aren’t anything special. But nor is the price, something you should take into consideration. Performance is competent in decent light, but even with 64MP shots enabled, you’ll lose a bit more detail zooming in than you’d expect from this megapixel count.
There’s a 32MP front-facer and both camera sets, front and back, can record 4K at 30fps. 1080p video bumps that up to 60fps, and most of Samsung’s software trickery is in place here too. But this is merely a ‘good’ effort from Samsung, who are happy to do far better if you give them more money.
Everything else
On the software front, Samsung’s done okay. Spotify and Netflix are installed from the outset, but you’ll have to uninstall Facebook yourself when you boot the phone up. There’s some bloat, from Google (mostly essential), Samsung (mostly optional, unless you live in the ecosystem), and Microsoft (eh…). These are, happily, all contained in their own folders and you’ve got to go looking for them. Just like we like it.
But there’s one downside. Samsung’s OneUI 3.0, running over Android 11, seems a little needier than it usually is. Which is fine, you can get it to bugger off, but we had a few flashbacks to Samsung’s TouchWiz UI (which is designed for the hard-of-thinking). The horror…