I have been using foldable phones since the original Galaxy Fold. I loved the idea, but I always had one complaint: The screen ratio was weird. When you unfolded them, they were square. Videos had massive black bars. It didn’t feel like a tablet; it felt like a big square phone.
However, Samsung has just solved that problem with the Galaxy Z TriFold. This is the device we were promised in sci-fi movies like Westworld. It isn’t just a phone anymore; it’s a legitimate workspace in your pocket.
Here is my analysis of why “Three Folds” are better than two.
The “Westworld” Form Factor
The magic here is the Dual Hinge. Unlike the Z Fold (which opens like a book), the TriFold opens like a brochure.
- Actually, this changes everything.
- When fully open, you get a massive widescreen display. Watching Netflix on this is a game-changer. No more black bars. It feels like holding a genuine iPad Mini, not a stretched-out Android phone.
Multitasking: The “Three-App” Dream
I’m a multitasker. I usually have Slack, Email, and Chrome open at the same time. On a normal phone, this is impossible. On a standard foldable, it’s cramped. In my view, the TriFold handles this perfectly.
- Left Panel: Outlook.
- Center Panel: Browser.
- Right Panel: YouTube. It feels less like a smartphone and more like a triple-monitor setup for your desk, but it fits in your hand.
The “Brick” Factor (Let’s Be Honest)
I have to address the elephant in the room: Thickness. When you fold a phone three times, it gets thick. It’s hefty. Putting this in skinny jeans is a bad idea. However, I am willing to make that trade. Why? Because it means I can leave my laptop bag at home. If I can carry a tablet in my jacket pocket, I don’t care if it’s a little thick.
Durability: Double the Hinge, Double the Trouble?
This is my biggest worry. One hinge is already a point of failure. Two hinges? That’s scary. If you buy this, get the insurance (Samsung Care+). While the engineering feels solid and the “Ultra Thin Glass” is stronger than ever, physics is physics. More moving parts mean more things that can break.
Conclusion
The Galaxy Z TriFold isn’t for everyone. It’s expensive, it’s thick, and it’s overkill for scrolling Instagram. However, for the 1% of us who want to run a business from the back of a taxi? It is perfection.
The smartphone has peaked. The Tablet-Phone era has officially begun.
