• Source:JND

Samsung has officially introduced the Galaxy Z TriFold, its most ambitious foldable yet, bringing a multi-hinge, three-display experience that attempts to blur the line between a phone and a compact tablet. The device launches first in South Korea on December 12 before expanding to more global markets, setting the stage for a new phase in foldable competition.

Huawei, however, arrived first in the trifold category with the Mate XTs, launched in China earlier this year. Powered by the Kirin 9020 and built on HarmonyOS, it holds a strong position among users looking for large displays, multitasking flexibility and advanced folding structures. With both brands taking very different engineering approaches, the comparison is inevitable.

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Design and Build

Samsung’s Galaxy Z TriFold uses a refined inward multi-fold layout that protects the main display when closed. Its Armour FlexHinge system brings two differently sized hinges that fold smoothly with minimal gaps, reinforced by a titanium hinge housing and an Advanced Armour Aluminium frame. Samsung highlights its internal quality checks that include CT scanning and laser precision measurements. The device also ships with dual SIM support, IP48 protection and Android 16-based OneUI 8.

Huawei’s Mate X leans into a distinctive trifold layout with parallel geometric embossing for structural rigidity. At 298 grams, it offers a leather-textured finish in white and purple. Its Tiangong dual-track hinge enables smooth transitions, while the phone integrates a multi-antenna design and even satellite communication for low-signal regions. The device supports single, dual and triple screen configurations.

Display Experience

Samsung equips the TriFold with a 10-inch inner Dynamic AMOLED 2X panel and a 6.5-inch FHD Plus outer screen, both offering adaptive refresh rates up to 120 Hz and full DCI-P3 coverage. The cover gets Gorilla Glass Ceramic 2, while the rear panel is strengthened with Ceramic Glass Fibre.

Huawei’s Mate XTs offer a more fluid screen evolution with 6.4-inch, 7.9-inch and 10.2-inch OLED LTPO displays depending on how the device is folded. It supports 1.07 billion colours, P3 gamut, 1440 Hz PWM dimming and 240 Hz touch input. With M Pencil 3 stylus support, the phone becomes more suited for creators and presenters.

Camera Systems

Samsung’s TriFold uses a triple camera array, including a 200MP main sensor with OIS, a 12MP ultrawide and a 10MP telephoto with up to 30x digital zoom. It houses two 10MP selfie cameras for the cover and inner screens.

Huawei’s Mate XTs opts for a quad setup with a 50MP primary camera featuring variable aperture and OIS, a 40MP ultrawide, a 12MP periscope lens with 5.5x optical and 50x digital zoom and a 1.5MP multispectral sensor. The front features an 8MP ultrawide.

Performance

Samsung uses the Snapdragon 8 Elite for Galaxy with up to 16GB RAM and 1TB storage, optimised for multitasking and foldable transitions.

Huawei’s Kirin 9020 claims a 20 to 36 per cent performance boost over the previous generation. HarmonyOS enables fluid mode switching, stylus input and heavy multitasking without noticeable slowdowns.

Battery and Charging

Both devices feature a 5600mAh battery. Samsung supports 45W wired and 15W wireless charging. Huawei supports 66W wired, 50W wireless and 5W reverse charging.

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Final Thoughts

Samsung’s TriFold leans on durability, hinge engineering and core software optimisation, while Huawei’s Mate XTs focuses on multi-mode usability, stylus integration and its more expansive triple-screen setup. Each device defines a different path for the future of foldables, but the real deciding factor may come down to how users value ecosystem stability versus raw hardware flexibility. The long-term winner in this three-screen battle is not fully clear yet.

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