Samsung Galaxy S25 Edge's main and ultrawide cameras revealed

Vlad, 30 April 2025

Yesterday the selfie camera of Samsung's upcoming Galaxy S25 Edge got revealed to be using the S5K3LU sensor with 1/3.2" type size. Today the same source is back with confirmations of the main camera as well as the ultrawide, and thus the phone's full camera package has now been outed (since it doesn't have a telephoto).

The main camera is unsurprisingly (since it was rumored a lot) the same 200 MP unit used on the Galaxy S25 Ultra, with a 1/1.3" type sensor. The ultrawide is 12 MP and uses a 1/2.55" type sensor, which means it will be identical to the ultrawide found in the Galaxy S25 and Galaxy S25+. So, unfortunately, the S25 Ultra's 50 MP ultrawide will be exclusive to that model for the time being.

Samsung Galaxy S25 Edge rear cameras Samsung Galaxy S25 Edge rear cameras
Samsung Galaxy S25 Edge rear cameras

The 200 MP main camera should provide very good 2x zoom shots, as evidenced in our review of the Galaxy S25 Ultra, which will slightly compensate for the lack of a proper telephoto. Then again, you're probably buying the S25 Edge for how thin it is, and not necessarily for its camera prowess, right? And compared to the iPhone 17 Air, at least it has an ultrawide as well.

According to the most recent rumor on the matter, the Galaxy S25 Edge will be announced on May 13 and released on May 23 in Korea and China. Then, on May 30, it will also make its way to other markets including the US.

Samsung Galaxy S25 Ultra

Samsung Galaxy S25

Samsung Galaxy S25+

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Reader comments

  • Ahmed
  • 01 May 2025
  • CI7

My old Xiaomi Mi 11 phone broke, and I'm now temporarily using a Samsung A24, and I've always used the macro camera. I loved the Samsung S25+ phone. It had a great screen with a slim and light body, which I found very slim. I didn'...

Yes, Qualcomm naming is not good in this case. I did not know until recently that it used this 7 cores variant in the Edge. They should call it something like Snapdragon 8S Elite, not "SM8750-3-AB" or "7 Elite" (recent Snapdrago...

  • kdss
  • 01 May 2025
  • nTd

No, it will not become more defective over time, because of this disabled core. This is common practice everywhere - Intel, AMD/ATI, nVidia, etc. You can't produce the most complex and powerful processors at 100 percent every time. During produc...

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