The Samsung Galaxy S23 FE could miss out on a major S23 Ultra feature

Samsung is reportedly working on a new Galaxy S23 Fan Edition (FE) phone after skipping a similar phone for the S22 series. According to reports, the company is expected to debut it with the older Snapdragon 8+ Gen 1 processor rather than the Snapdragon 8 Gen 2 processor that ships with the other Galaxy S23 devices.

Samsung had typically used the same processor for the Fan edition phones as the mainline models, but has opted to cut costs with materials instead.

Andy Boxall/DigitalTrends

The report comes from a Twitter tipster, via the Samsung-focused tech blog SamMobile, which identifies the Galaxy S23 FE as being powered by the Snapdragon 8+ Gen 1. This is the same chip Samsung has used in its Z Fold 4 and Z Flip 4 foldables, and it is a step above the 8 Gen 1 and a half-step behind the more modern 8 Gen 2.

There’s a school of thought that says the Snapdragon 8+ Gen 1 is a good enough processor anyway — and that’s true. It powers the flagship class Z Fold 4, as mentioned above. If all you’re interested in doing is gaming, taking pictures quickly, and using all the latest apps, it should be more than enough.

There are no reports of the other specs for the S23 FE, but we can expect a broadly similar design with a plastic chassis to replace the glass. It will perhaps have a smaller display and battery, with niceties like 45-watt charging almost certainly on the chopping block.

There is one real-world feature that S23 FE users could potentially miss out on, though.

The Snapdragon 8 Gen 2 adds significant battery improvements that make the Galaxy S23, Galaxy S23 Plus, and Galaxy S23 Ultra battery beasts. The 8+ Gen 1 isn’t bad in the battery department, but the 8 Gen 2 handily has it beat. With the 8 Gen 2, the S23 FE could be excellent — but we suppose Samsung would say that’s what the regular S23 is for.

dt-daily-logo.png?fit=430%2C140&p=1

Today’s tech news, curated and condensed for your inbox

Subscribe



Check your inbox!

Please provide a valid email address to continue.

This email address is currently on file. If you are not receiving newsletters, please check your spam folder.

Sorry, an error occurred during subscription. Please try again later.

Privacy Policy

Use a different email

Related posts

Latest posts

Mail app for macOS will soon get an overdue AI upgrade

Apple demoed an AI-charged Mail experience months ago, but delayed one of the crucial tricks for Macs. It seems a macOS update will finally serve it in April.

I compared the two of the most powerful mobile chipsets — here’s what happened

The Snapdragon 8 Elite and Dimensity 9400 are two of the most popular smartphone chips. I compared them head-to-head.

Qualcomm expands Snapdragon 8 Elite lineup with new 7-core variant

The lower-tier offering comes as Qualcomm is rumored to be working on midrange and overclocked Snapdragon 8 Elite variants.

Instagram tries to capitalize on TikTok uncertainty with new ‘Edits’ app

Meta's building quite the reputation for trying to steal users while their competitors are down.

Stuffcool Giga is the Indian brand’s best 65W power bank yet

Stuffcool makes dozens of power banks, and the 20,000mAh Giga is its best yet. This 65W power bank is significantly

TikTok is Working Again in the U.S., But Still Removed From App Store

Well, that didn't last long. Less than a day after TikTok became temporarily unavailable in the U.S., the app is

The best OnePlus 13R cases for 2025

The OnePlus 13R is the newest and most advanced OnePlus midrange phone around. Keep it safe with one of these great cases.

TikTok goes dark in the US with a bunch of other ByteDance apps

TikTok has shut down in the US, and the app is no longer available to download on mobile. The company has now pinned its hopes on President-elect Donald Trump.

Forget DLSS 4 — this app already does multi-frame generation

DLSS 4 promises multi-frame generation to RTX 50-series GPU, but this app includes the feature for any graphics card.

Everything you need to know about AI agents and what they can do

Agents are specialized language and reasoning models that can work independently to automate repetitive tasks without direct human oversight. Here's everything you need to know about the "next big thing" in generative AI.