
Ryan Haines / Android Authority
When I first underwent Samsungs Galaxy Z Flip 6It surprised me – not because it changed the game completely for flip phones, but because it was generally good enough that it didn’t have to. It won me with reliable cameras, good enough battery life and a regular shrinking screen crash. However, the one thing I trusted more than anything else on a flip phone – the cover screen experience – still unfinished. I thought the flexible window required too much setup for brand new Galaxy Z Flip users and I was disappointed with it Early leaks of Galaxy Z Flip 7 Pointed to more of the same, but newer reports give me fresh hope. Here’s the reason.
How often do you use the flip phone’s cover screen?
3 votes
Yes Samsung, copy Motorola

My main problem with Samsung’s Flex window has never been its shape. Sure, I originally expressed disappointment about the folder-like screen, especially in the face of Motorola’s edge-to-edge panel, which is brighter and sharper, but it grew on me over time. I appreciated that I did not reorganize apps around the camera cutting, and I always felt that I could keep Galaxy Z Flip 6 comfortably without accidentally tapping the sides of the outer display.
However, I have also come to tie the unusually shaped screen with Samsung’s half -baked approach to flip phone software. I spent two years removing boxing and setting up the Galaxy Z flip devices, and on the much larger Flex windows (at least compared to such as Galaxy Z Flip 4), and then find out that I had to install Good lock To use 90% of the apps on my phone. Initially, I thought it would be a one -year solution, implemented just to get the Galaxy Z Flip 5 of the factory floor, so I wouldn’t give it too much grief. Then one Ui Plus Good Lock Plus Multi-Star Setup came back for the Galaxy Z Flip 6, and I had to read my own guide to remember how I had set it up last time.
Good Lock and Multi-Star are confusing enough that I had to read my own setup guide.
And now, with Galaxy Z Flip 7 Reportedly switching from the folder-shaped Flex window to a larger square screen, I have fresh hope. I mean, when Motorola switched from the tiny cover screen on the first few Razr to the much larger screen on Razr Plus (2023), it completely changed how the widgets worked. It opened the door for just about any app on your phone to use that space; No additional software is needed. So if Samsung is about to do the same, I am optimistic that it will also rethink the research screen software.
Sure, Samsung had already nailed with widgets that worked well in the folder -shaped window, but if it changes, the apps can too. There will still be room for a now bar-like alert interface along the bottom edge next to the cameras, but the apps themselves can extend closer to the top and lower edges of the small, square screen. At least there may be some widget -redesign and new wrinkles to get along with A Ui 7But I would like to see Samsung try to give Motorola’s software experience more of a hunt.
Of course, if there is something that Samsung seems comfortable, it is not to fix what is not broken. So right now rumors suggest that Samsung will update the 50MP and 12MP camera duo that calls the Galaxy Z Flip Series home, maybe slim the general profile a bit, and well, it’s kind of it – the battery will remain about the same, as the expected charging options. If that is the case, it will only let Motorola further develop the cover screen experience and cement Razr as my preferred flip phone. Otherwise I assume that Samsung’s most important upgrades will be Galaxy AI features.
Galaxy AI upgrades are fine but not enough

Ryan Haines / Android Authority
At this time, it feels like a sure effort that many of the Galaxy Z FLIP 7’s upgrades will come in the form of new Galaxy AI features. I mean, that’s exactly what we saw Samsung doing with the Galaxy S25 series: slightly fine-tuning the frames on the smaller devices, blowing up the color options and then calling it one day to focus on new software features. So I will not be surprised if the Galaxy Z Flip 7 lands increases the improvements of automatic zoom, two -way interpreter mode and the ability to activate the Gemini through the power button. And frankly, there are all good things to have. I like them on the Galaxy S25 series, and I would like to have them on the flip.
However, I want a lot to think that the new Galaxy AI features are not everything that Samsung has in mind. Yes, I know we get a new Snapdragon 8 Elite for Galaxy The chips, which will look up the Galaxy Z Flip 7’s performance numbers, but performance is never what was destroyed. We also get a guarantee for several years of new updates, but it was never my problem with Samsung’s top level folding phones. I even want to bet that we get the performance from Sydney Sweeney at some point under package, and I can only hope it’s because she shows off a new flexible window.
You can use the Galaxy Z flip without ai … Using it without the Flex window is much tougher.
The problem, for me, is that Samsung wants to show off its impressive Galaxy Ai chops without fixing the features that people will use every day. You can easily pull the Galaxy Z Flip 6 out of your pocket and walk on your day without touching Galaxy Ai. Maybe you need a photo assistance or one of the camera features here and there, but it’s not guaranteed – it’s much tougher to say the same about the Flex window. Samsung’s small, folder-shaped cover display is the first thing you want to see every time you pick up the Galaxy Z flip, and I want it to feel like a screen that I can easily use. For my sake, I hope the new leaks are true because they think I will at least be a little excited on the Galaxy Z Flip 7 when it comes out.
But hey, if they don’t prove to be true, then Samsung makes it so much easier to grab a current Galaxy Z Flip 6 – as you can do below.