Samsung is performing a “Sweet Summertime Upgrade” promotion, which means that different Galaxy models are combined with a free Galaxy Watch7. The two we have chosen are S24 FE and A56.
The Samsung Galaxy S24 FE is discount of £ 100 at the moment and seeing how the 256 GB variant is only £ 60 than that of 128 GB, it is the one we recommend: the storage is not expandable and 128 GB is quite narrow.
The exynos 2400e of the phone is rather zippy and the configuration of the 50+8+12 MP camera includes a 75 mm 3X camera. The battery situation is typical for Samsung with a capacity of 5,000 mAh and 25 W wired charging, but at least it is also obtained wireless 15 W – which and the television camera are quite rare for this price range. This is the promise of 7 years of operating system and security updates.

The Samsung Galaxy A56 is almost cheaper for the same 8/256 GB configuration. However, the 2400E is faster than 70-80% (sometimes more) than the Ayssenos 1580, so these savings have a cost-and that cost includes the loss of the canvase camera. There is a faster 45 W top -up for the 5,000 mAh battery slightly larger (against 4,700 mAh on the FE), but there is no wireless charging. The A56 will receive 6 years of support, but since it is a newer year than the S24 FE, the support for both will end in the same period.

And here is the tribute provided with both phones, the Samsung Galaxy Watch7. Apparently, you can only get the 40 mm model – which is only north of £ 200 at this moment (£ 290 msrp). It has a 1.3 “display and a 300 mAh battery. You can read more on the offer and claim the clock here.

As a reminder, the Samsung Galaxy S25 Edge will be launched next week. During the pre-order period there is a free storage update at 512 GB, £ 100 Samsung Credit and now Amazon added a discount of £ 100 for the members of first students who were not there last week.

The price little x7 Pro fell to £ 240 for the basic model of 8/256 GB and £ 270 for 12/512 GB (a worthy update for only £ 30). Three weeks ago those prices were respectively £ 285 and £ 327.

Little x7 vanilla is also a little cheaper, but the Pro model has a better value for money. You lose many performances moving from an 8400 ultra sizing with UFS 4.0 storage (x7 pro) to size 7300 ultra with UFS 2.2 storage (x7). The GPU in particular is in another class. The battery capacity is also lost (5,110 mAh against 6,000 mAh) and the charge speed (45W against 90 W) and this affects the battery performance.

The little F7 Pro is considerably expensive (£ 160 more) compared to the former pro, but its Snapdragon 8 Jan 3 is only marginally faster. There are other updates such as screen resolution (1440p+ vs. 1220p+), the size of the sensor of the main camera (1/1.55 ”vs. 1/1.95″) and Wi-Fi 7, but the price prize can be difficult to justify.

Finally, the Ultra F7 price is where it was last week: another supplement of £ 160. However, you get the latest Elite Snapdragon 8 chip, as well as a 2.5x/60 mm 50 MP telephoto lens camera and a higher resolution at 32 MP at the ultra level (VS. 8MP).
The 5,300 mAh battery is smaller, but supports 120 W and 50 W and 50 wireless charging despite the apparently large difference in capacity, the battery life ends up being more or less the same. Take a look at our article Ultra F7 Pro vs. F7 for camera samples and more details on how these two compare.


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