Tech
Samsung is bringing a “flagship feature” to the A-series but is it enough to make you reconsider?
Samsung will announce its newest flagships very early next year, possibly in the last 10 days of January. But not everyone’s looking forward to the company’s latest and greatest — and most expensive — offerings. To spice things up it seems like Samsung will bring 45W charging to the upcoming Galaxy A56, something considered a flagship feature for the company until now.
But is it enough to make consumers waiting for the Galaxy S25 Ultra reconsider?
Let’s be honest, 45W is ancient tech
Contrast these 45W charging speeds with what can be found on competitors and it’s honestly a bit disappointing. Chinese phones in particular offer much faster charging and even budget offerings charge at double the speed that the S25 lineup will. Many of these phones actually have faster wireless charging than the wired charging found on Samsung’s phones.
Now there is one good excuse for this.
Faster charging is a fire hazard
Image credit — PhoneArena
These modes adapt to user behavior and charge accordingly: faster during the day and slower at night if said user works during daytime. There are also options to limit batteries to charging up to only 80 percent and then stopping. Samsung doesn’t really have any strong reasons to still be sticking to 45W charging. And if the A56 is getting it we might finally see the flagships take it up a notch.
So is the A56 a worthy competitor to its flagship counterparts?
No Samsung mid-ranger has ever looked this good. | Image credit — PhoneArena
Galaxy A56 will have decent amounts of RAM (likely 8 GB with 12 GB for some markets) and a decent enough Exynos processor. It will also very likely receive six years of software support similar to the Galaxy A36, which makes it an excellent purchase for people who don’t obsessively upgrade each year.
But you know what it won’t have? That super snappy response time for power users or that absolutely brilliant screen with the anti-reflective coating. It also won’t have the convenience of wireless charging or options for massive amounts of storage. And if we’re being completely vain for a second, it won’t be the eye-catching stunner that its flagship counterparts will be.
But it will most likely have excellent screen protection and an aluminum frame like the Galaxy A55. It will also take very good photos — even if not the best — and come with Android 15 out of the box. So if nothing else it will still be able to provide a pretty impressive experience even if it’s not as premium as the flagships.
45W charging for the A56 doesn’t really show the waning gap between flagships and mid-rangers as much as it shows the slowing down of innovation for Samsung’s best models. The company really needs to step up its game especially after being accused of copying Apple’s product design this year.
If you do go for an A56 next year remember that you’ll need to purchase a 45W charger separately because you won’t get one in the box. Now that’d be a flagship feature I’d love to see return.