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Corning reveals Gorilla Glass Ceramic 3 to save your phone’s screen from a hellish drop

It can survive 20 drops onto asphalt-like surfaces without breaking a sweat.

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Gorilla Glass Ceramic 3 render
Corning
MWC 2026
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If you have ever dropped your phone on concrete and felt your heart sink before you flipped it over, I understand you. I distinctly remember the anxiety I felt the moment I dropped my brand new iPhone Air and the elation that followed when the device survived. 

That split second of panic is something Corning has spent years trying to engineer away, and Gorilla Glass Ceramic 3 is the company’s best answer yet. The new material promises significantly improved drop protection for modern smartphones.

What makes it special?

What makes this special is that Corning developed this glass not only to survive the first few drops, but with long-term durability in mind. Lori Hamilton, Division Vice President & Business Technology Director of Corning Gorilla Glass, said, “With our unparalleled expertise in glass and ceramic science, we built Gorilla Glass Ceramic 3 to provide consistent, reliable durability that holds up over time.”

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Corning’s test data, if it stands true in real-world usage, supports this statement. In lab tests, Gorilla Glass Ceramic 3 survived drops greater than two meters onto surfaces that replicate concrete. The glass also survived at least 20 repeated drops from a height of one meter onto surfaces simulating asphalt.

Concrete and asphalt are the worst surfaces to drop your phone on because these surfaces are hard and uneven. If the Gorilla Glass Ceramic 3 can survive drops on these surfaces, it will indeed improve our lives.

When will Gorilla Glass Ceramic 3 arrive on smartphones?

Corning Gorilla Glass Ceramic 3 is already integrated into the new Motorola Razr Fold, which the company unveiled at MWC 2026. The phone features one of the best cameras in any foldable smartphone, and its front display is protected by the new glass. 

This means Gorilla Glass Ceramic 3 is already in production, and it will likely be protecting many flagship smartphones released in 2026. I’m eager to see how it performs in the real world and whether it lives up to its promises.

Rachit Agarwal
Rachit is a seasoned tech journalist with over ten years of experience covering the consumer technology landscape.
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