Samsung Galaxy S23 FE's Snapdragon variant could launch soon in India

Sagar, 18 December 2023

The Samsung Galaxy S23 FE unveiled in October comes in two versions - one powered by the Exynos 2200 SoC and another having the Snapdragon 8 Gen 1 chip at the helm. The Snapdragon version is currently exclusive to the US, with other regions - including India - getting the Exynos variant. That could change soon since the Samsung Galaxy S23 FE's Snapdragon model is expected to launch in India soon.

Indian e-commerce giant Flipkart has uploaded an image on its website under the "Upcoming Launch" section. It's the same image that was used to tease the S23 FE's launch in India in October. The picture - having text "The New Epic" and "Coming soon" - doesn't explicitly mention the Galaxy S23 FE's Snapdragon model, but since the Exynos version is already available in India, it's safe to say this teaser is for the Snapdragon variant.

Samsung Galaxy S23 FE's Snapdragon variant could launch soon in India

Except for the difference in the chip, both Galaxy S23 FE versions come with the same specs, so regardless of which model you buy, you'll get a 6.4" 120Hz FullHD+ Dynamic AMOLED screen, 4,500 mAh battery with 25W charging, and IP68 rating. Both variants feature four cameras - 50MP primary, 12MP ultrawide, 8MP telephoto, and 10MP selfie.

Samsung Galaxy S23 FE Snapdragon model Samsung Galaxy S23 FE Snapdragon model
Samsung Galaxy S23 FE Snapdragon model

You can read our Samsung Galaxy S23 FE Snapdragon model's review here to learn more about it. We also have a video review that's attached below.


Related

Reader comments

How about snapdragon version?

Nah, Exynos 2200 has better performance this time round. It's a very different type from what was found in S22 series.

  • Anonymous
  • 19 Dec 2023
  • srr

Teardown shows it has a massive cooler, the biggest so far in a Samsung phone. They haven't fixed anything with the chips just used those they still had on stock because the sales were bad for the past S line. This thing probably throttles a lot...

Popular articles

More

Popular devices

Electric Vehicles

More