Asus unveiled its gaming flagship series this week – the ROG Phone 9 and 9 Pro feature the Snapdragon 8 Elite chipset, an AeroActive Cooler X Pro with its own subwoofer for 2.1 sound, faster 185 Hz displays, and bigger 5,800mAh batteries.
The ROG Phone 9 and 9 Pro are already on sale in Taiwan, Hong Kong, and China, and are coming to Europe in December, and the US in January. Prices start at €1,100 for the 12/256GB ROG Phone 9 and €1,300 for the base 16/512GB Pro.
The Galaxy S25 Slim, which is expected to replace the FE next year, will feature a 200MP main camera (but a smaller 1/1.56-inch sensor than the S24 Ultra’s 1/1.3-inch), and a pair of 1/2.76-inch ISOCELL HP5s for the 3.5x zoom and ultrawide.
A word on the Galaxy S25 Ultra – its bill of materials (BoM) is “at least” $110 over that of the S24 Ultra, so expect it to feature some nicer components, but also cost more.
We also saw dummies of the upcoming S25 Ultra, featuring slightly more rounded corners.
The AniMe Vision display on the back can now actually work as a display that lets you play games.
The phone is said to have a 200MP main camera, but its camera setup won’t be quite the same as on the Galaxy S Ultra.
The corners are indeed ever so slightly rounded.
It all has to do with the costs Samsung itself is incurring.
More on Samsung – the Galaxy A series will finally get 45W charging!
Huawei announced pre-orders for the Mate 70 series ahead of the series’ official unveil on November 26. The series will consist of Mate 70, Mate 70 Pro, and Mate 70 Pro+ phones, according to Vmall. The Huawei-owned online store also revealed there will be five different memory variants and eight colors split between the three devices.
First in line is Galaxy A56.
It might be even slimmer than the iPhone 6.
The ZTE-owned brand reveals the phone in all three colors.
Three phones, five memory variants and eight color options across the board.
Finally, we have the Galaxy A16 4G in for review and the iPhone SE 4 is expected in March.
Insiders basically confirm the phone for March.
Do you really need 5G anyway?