Skip to main content
  1. Home
  2. Phones
  3. Android
  4. Mobile
  5. News

Leaked video gives us our best look yet at the Samsung Galaxy S20 Plus

Add as a preferred source on Google
S20 Hands on Video

It looks as if we’ll go into Samsung Galaxy Unpacked on February 11 knowing everything about Samsung’s range of upcoming flagship smartphones. The last few days have seen the confirmation of the range’s new name — the Galaxy S20, to match the new year — and they’ve also seen more information about the specs we can expect on certain members of the S20 series. But most recently, we’ve had our best look at the Galaxy S20 Plus yet, thanks to a video released by XDA Developers’ Max Weinbach.

Recommended Videos

The short video, which is just 13 seconds long, shows the Galaxy S20 Plus being picked up and turned over in the hand, allowing us to see the device from multiple angles. Portions have been blurred out to protect the identity of Max’s source, but many of the phone’s expected features are still obvious. From the front, a thin screen protector is visible, protecting the device’s single front-facing selfie camera. This single lens is centrally located and contained within a precisely-cut punch-hole, like the Galaxy Note 10.

The selfie lens cutout is more obvious when the screen is activated later in the video, which also highlights the device’s extremely thin bezels. While the bottom is obscured by Max’s protective blur, it seems as if the thinness of the bezels continues along the bottom of the phone. There’s no sign of a fingerprint scanner on the back or side of the device, so it’s fair to assume the in-display fingerprint scanner is returning. This is likely to be an ultrasonic scanner, as on the Galaxy S10 and S10 Plus.

There’s little on the back of the phone, aside from a sticker and the camera module. It’s expected the camera module will contain a 108-megapixel main lens, a 48-megapixel telephoto lens with a 10x periscope zoom, a 12-megapixel ultra-wide-angle lens, and a lens that specializes in taking macro shots. An LED flash is also obvious, as is a small hole rumored to house a microphone for zoom-in audio during video recording.

The volume rocker and power button are clearly seen on the right-hand side of the device, but the dedicated Bixby key is missing. This is an unsurprising removal. The Bixby key was missing from last year’s Note 10 range, and we expected to see Samsung’s dedicated A.I. key expunged from flagship phones going forward. The removal of the headphone jack is similarly expected, and though not confirmed in this particular video, it has been rumored for some time — and since the venerable audio port was removed in the Note 10, we expected the next S-range to follow suit.

While it may seem as if we’ve seen everything there is to see where the Galaxy S20 range is concerned, you can be sure we’ll still be eagerly watching when the new phones are revealed at Samsung Unpacked on February 11.

Mark Jansen
Former Mobile Evergreen Editor
Mark Jansen is an avid follower of everything that beeps, bloops, or makes pretty lights. He has a degree in Ancient &…
A free soundscape app just got the kind of controls paid calm apps love to hide
The latest Oasis update adds 16 preset soundscapes, more than 10 new sounds, and background audio for focus, sleep, meditation, and winding down.
Electronics, Phone, Mobile Phone

Oasis version 2.2 gives the free soundscape app a more useful place in daily routines. The iPhone update adds ready-made soundscapes, new audio options, and quicker ways to return to a setup when you’re trying to focus, fall asleep, meditate, or cool down.

The biggest change is a new library of 16 presets built around calm, meditation, focus, and energy. Oasis also adds more than 10 sounds, a mini player, session memory, background mixed audio, interface updates, bug fixes, performance improvements, and accessibility tweaks.

Read more
Here’s a cool new app for people who treat every photo dump like a magazine spread
Mocha Frame is a tiny app makes every photo to look curated
Mocha Frame is a new iOS app

You're probably not a stranger to filters for your social media uploads. While some apps just fix up your shots with minor touch-ups, others want to change the entire look and feel. Mocha Frame takes things a little further. It doesn't just clean up your shots; it lets you frame them up or sign them before sharing them.

Mocha Frame, highlighted in a Reddit post by its developer, is an iPhone app built around presentation rather than heavy edits. The developer describes it as a tool for giving photos a cleaner, more elegant look before sharing, with minimal frames, Polaroid-style frames, creative collage layouts, and themed frames for different moods and festivals.

Read more
I tried turning the Red Magic 11S Pro into a handheld console, and it worked almost too well
Pushing Red Magic's liquid cooled gaming phone past the normal smartphone limit
Red Magic 11S Pro Review

One look at the Red Magic 11S Pro, and you can tell it's not trying to be subtle. This isn’t chasing the overly polished look and feel of a modern flagship smartphone. It isn’t trying to convince you it’s a great camera phone, either. This thing looks like it escaped from the desk of someone who still thinks transparent electronics are the peak of industrial design.

Many phones call themselves gaming phones, then spend half their time trying to look normal. The Red Magic 11S Pro has no such insecurity. The transparent back looks absolutely bonkers, with visible liquid cooling, RGB lighting, a flat glass-and-metal body, and a design that lives or dies by the fact that you either love gaming hardware or you don’t. The Nightfreeze unit I tested looked sleek.

Read more