The Galaxy Z Fold 8 rumors make me think Samsung’s starting a new foldable trend

The Galaxy Z Fold 8 rumors make me think Samsung’s starting a new foldable trend

The Galaxy Z Fold 8 rumors make me think Samsung’s starting a new foldable trend
Samsung

Samsung’s teaser videos are making the rounds, and most of the coverage is on the obvious: the Galaxy Z Fold 8 (initially introduced as the Galaxy Z Fold 8 Wide) resembles a squarish shape when closed. Samsung even posted videos of a broken chocolate bar and a decapitated puzzle to hint at the new proportions, which is the kind of cryptic marketing I’d normally roll my eyes at.

But what I keep thinking about is what that design shift says about where Galaxy Z Fold 8 development is going — and maybe the foldable market with it. Samsung appears to finally be ready to stop designing foldables that imitate regular smartphones.

Foldables Have Spent Years Trying to Blend In

The first few generations of foldables tried to feel as normal as possible. That meant narrow cover displays, familiar proportions, and a deliberate effort to minimize how weird the form factor actually is.

I understand why. Foldables were expensive, fragile-feeling, and niche. The safe play was to make them feel like a phone you already knew.

The problem is that all those compromises added up. Cramped typing on a too-narrow cover screen. App layouts that didn’t know what to do with the inner display. Web browsing that felt awkward in both orientations.

I’ll be real with you: foldables never stopped feeling like a phone with an identity crisis.

A Wider Galaxy Z Fold 8 Could Be a Sign the Industry Is Changing

What the Galaxy Z Fold 8 Wide rumors are actually describing isn’t just a wider phone. It’s a different question. Instead of “how do we make this look like a normal smartphone?” Samsung might be asking, “How do we make the best foldable we can?”

Leaked dimensions put the Galaxy Z Fold 8 Wide at 123.9 x 81.9 mm when folded—noticeably squarer than any foldable Samsung has made before. Open it up and you’re looking at a 7.6-inch display with a 4:3 aspect ratio. That’s closer to a small tablet optimized for how people actually use screens.

A wider cover display improves typing in a real way. It makes split-screen multitasking more usable. Reading, video, side-by-side apps — all of it works better when the proportions aren’t being constrained by what a regular slab phone looks like. Someone who got hands-on time with the hardware ahead of launch told 9to5Google the device “feels like a new beginning.” At 201g—lighter than the Galaxy Z Fold 7—the hardware is apparently backing that up.

The Forbes’ reporting adds more context: case filings show the Galaxy Z Fold 8 Wide and the Z Fold 8 Ultra are genuinely different devices, not minor spec variants. They’re targeting different buyers with different form factors. That’s a company leaning in to new, more practical designs.

Foldables Don’t Need to Copy Smartphones Anymore

The smartphone market is mature. Manufacturers are competing on AI features, camera specs, and processor benchmarks. Meaningful hardware experimentation in the slab-phone space has become rare.

And yet, foldables have always had a built-in excuse to be different. The hinge is the hardware innovation — everything else should be optimized around making that hinge worth having. For years, the industry treated familiarity as the primary design goal. The Galaxy Z Fold 8 rumors suggest Samsung is shifting that priority.

That’s worth noticing.

The Galaxy Z Fold 8 Rumors Have Me Optimistic

Samsung Unpacked is expected on July 22 in London, and Samsung hasn’t officially confirmed every detail yet. There’s still plenty that could change between now and then.

But if these Galaxy Z Fold 8 rumors hold up, Samsung could be signaling that the industry is finally comfortable letting foldables be their own category—instead of treating them like smartphones that just haven’t found their place yet.

That would be worth a broken chocolate bar teaser, honestly.

Author

Lauren Wadowsky

Lauren has been writing and editing since 2008. She loves working with text and helping writers find their voice. When she's not typing away at her computer, she cooks and travels with her husband and two kids.

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