The highly-anticipated Samsung Galaxy Note20 series will be officially unleashed during the upcoming Unpacked event held on August 5th. This time round, the Galaxy Note20 series will reportedly arrives in two different flavors including the vanilla Galaxy Note20, as well as the ultra high-end Galaxy Note20 Ultra.
Recently, we’d already seen a hands-on video of the Galaxy Note20 Ultra which showcases the front and rear designs of the flagship, as well as confirmed its continued support for S-Pen. With the majority of leaks focusing on the Galaxy Note20 Ultra, it seems like we’d somehow forgotten about its vanilla Note20 model.
I feel like, with a leak such as this, several hours of exclusivity for Patreon subs should suffice. Many of you have been quite patient. ? pic.twitter.com/MqxzlRpD5e
— Evan Blass (@evleaks) July 17, 2020
However, that wouln’t be the case anymore. Today, we’re finally able to have our first official look at the vanilla Galaxy Note20 courtesy of well-accredited leaker Evan Blass who’d published a 360-degrees spin of the device on his Twitter handle.
As expected, the Galaxy Note20 will have some notable differences in terms of appearance with its Note20 Pro sibling. More specifically, it will feature a slightly smaller 6.5-inches display instead of the huge 6.9-inches display which the Note20 Pro brings along.
Apart from that, the Galaxy Note20 will also be ditching a curved display for a traditional flat panel that comes with an Infinity-O design. However, it do have extremely slim bezels along its four sides.
According to recent reports, the front display is expected to be a AMOLED display which boasts a 2345 x 1084 pixels screen resolution and a somewhat disappointing 60Hz refresh rate.
Over at the back, we continue to see a familiar rectangular camera housing which play host to a triple-camera system and a LED flash. Its rear camera module is slightly less bulky than that of its Note20 Ultra sibling.
In terms of internals, the Galaxy Note20 is likely to be powered by the latest Snapdragon 865+ SoC in the Chinese and U.S. markets, as well as Exynos 992 SoC for the rest of the markets.