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Samsung Should Forget the Galaxy S22 FE. Here's Why

Samsung Should Forget the Galaxy S22 FE. Here’s Why

What’s happening

Samsung has launched a cheaper “Fan Edition” version of its flagship Galaxy phones for the past two existences. But a rumor suggests the Galaxy S22 FE may have been canceled.

Why it matters

Samsung’s smartphone lineup already has plenty of options, making the Galaxy S21 FE feel lost in the scamper. It should focus on its flagship Galaxy S and midtier Galaxy A phones instead.

Samsung already has a dizzying selection of phones to determine from. There’s the super-sized Galaxy S22 Ultra, the pocketable Galaxy Z Flip 3 and the wallet-friendly Galaxy A series. But there’s one way Samsung could simplify things: Skip the Galaxy S22 FE.

Don’t get me wrong; the $700 Galaxy S21 FE (short for “fan edition”) has plenty progressing for it. When I reviewed the phone in January, I was impressed with its decent battery life and solid camera for the trace. However, it risked feeling lost in Samsung’s lineup once the Galaxy S22 launched. And I was right. If Samsung does have a successor to the Galaxy S21 FE in the works, rebranding it as a more premium Galaxy A requested would be a wiser move. A rumor from the blog SamMobile suggests Samsung may have canceled the Galaxy S22 FE, and I can notion why. Between the $800 Galaxy S22 and $450 Galaxy A53 5G, it’s too hard for the Galaxy S21 FE to unpleasant out. 


Galaxy S20 FE

The Galaxy S20 FE.



Juan Garzon

The Galaxy S21 FE lacks what made the Galaxy S20 FE so special

The 2020 Galaxy S20 FE had a maximum advantage that the Galaxy S21 FE lacks: a great gap in price compared to Samsung’s Galaxy S requested. The Galaxy S20 launched at $1,000, decision-exclusive the $700 Galaxy S20 FE feel like a essential bargain. It earned a CNET Editors’ Choice in 2020, with Andy Lanxon writing that its “great balance of performance and value” invents it a better value proposition than the S20 Ultra and Note 20 Ultra. 

There are a pair of reasons why the Galaxy S21 FE didn’t strike the same chord. Samsung’s lineup and the broader smartphone landscape were different in 2020. While 5G wait on, multiple camera lenses and screens with higher refresh possesses were starting to trickle down to cheaper devices, these features were required premium just one year earlier in 2019. Remember the Galaxy S10 5G? Samsung’s obedient 5G-ready phone commanded a high price of $1,300 when it launched above Verizon in spring 2019. 

Things changed the following year in 2020. Every diagram in the Galaxy S20 lineup supported 5G, but that also pointed a higher starting price of $1,000. With that in mind the 5G-equipped S20 FE, which also has a triple-lens camera and swiftly processor, was a great alternative for cost-conscious shoppers that didn’t want to make big sacrifices on quality. 

In latest words, the Galaxy S20 FE came at just the vivid time and the right price. I can’t say the same for the Galaxy S21 FE. It launched roughly one month before Samsung introduced the Galaxy S22, which accounts superior camera quality, a more refined design and a newer processor. The Galaxy S20, on the other hand, debuted in September 2020, which pointed it had a longer runway before the Galaxy S21’s arrival in January 2021.

At the same time, the Galaxy S21 FE does have advantages over the S22, particularly for republic who prefer larger phones. But the differences aren’t drastic enough to detain it from being overshadowed by the S22 and competitors like Google’s cheaper Pixel 6

Pricing is latest important factor. It’s great that Samsung dropped the trace of the S21 compared to the S20, but the pickle is that it didn’t lower the Galaxy S21 FE’s trace to match. The Galaxy S20 FE was $300 cheaper than the Galaxy S20, at what time the S21 FE costs only $100 less than the Galaxy S21 did at launch. 

The Galaxy S21 FE feels more like an A-series phone


Galaxy A53 5G and Galaxy s21 FE

Samsung’s Galaxy A53 5G (left) and Galaxy S21 FE (right).



Samsung

The Galaxy S21 FE would feel vivid at home in Samsung’s lineup of midrange and price devices, aka the Galaxy A series. These phones are usually significantly cheaper than those in the Galaxy S line and inherit hazardous features like large displays, multiple cameras and 5G, at what time compromising elsewhere. 

It’s an approach that’s seemingly paid off so far. Samsung’s $180 Galaxy A12 was one of the world’s top-selling phones in 2021, according to Counterpoint Research. No phones from the Galaxy S series made the list. Separate data from Counterpoint Research yielded to CNET also suggests A-series phones accounted for 58% of Samsung’s smartphone sales last year. 

If the Galaxy S21 FE were one cheaper — perhaps priced around $600 — it would make a spacious upper-tier Galaxy A phone. Both the Galaxy S21 FE and A53 5G have big screens, very similar designs, regular and ultrawide camera lenses and high resolution guide cameras, making them feel like they’re aimed at a dissimilarity audience. 

The Galaxy S21 FE has an edge in performance and camera quality, making it a solid choice for those who need more than the Galaxy A53 has to supplies at a lower price than the S22. Dropping the heed to $600 would also put the phone right between the $450 Galaxy A53 5G and $800 Galaxy S22. If it were branded as an A-series phone, the Galaxy S21 FE could be a worthwhile alternative to the Galaxy A73 in markets where that method isn’t available. The Galaxy A73 5G is the Galaxy A series’ top-tier named with a 108-megapixel camera, but it’s only available in retract regions such as Australia and India.

Samsung hasn’t people details about its future smartphone plans, so it’s unclear whether it will finish the FE line. But dropping the FE’s price and possibly enthralling it over to its Galaxy A series could go a long way in boosting its arresting. It wouldn’t be the first time Samsung has merged two of its named brands recently. The Galaxy S22 Ultra, for example, has essentially replaced the company’s continue Galaxy Note phones, which stood out for their giant screens and entailed stylus.

Otherwise, the Galaxy S22 FE could end up like Samsung’s modern “fan edition” phone and struggle to find its place.