Samsung Galaxy M32 Review - a Good “Samsung” Phone | Camera Test vs Redmi Note 10 Pro By MySmartPrice English

By MySmartPrice English
Sep 3, 2021
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Samsung Galaxy M32 Review - a Good “Samsung” Phone | Camera Test vs Redmi Note 10 Pro

Hype is a funny thing: it actually works as a double-edged sword. More often than not. It only leads to disappointment very early. Does it actually work which brings me to Samsung's new phone, the Samsung Galaxy m32, which the company of course has been hyping a lot? Lets you and me together, find out if the phone is worth the hype or not. My name is Assad you're watching my smart price, and this is our review of the Samsung Galaxy m32, and before we move on, don't forget to hit that red subscribe button and the bell icon right next to it to get notified. Whenever my smart press puts out an awesome, new tech, video, and we're really trying to reach 100k subscribers soon.

So please help us in that mission. Evidently, the marquee feature of the Samsung Galaxy m32 is its 90hz super AMOLED display with FHD plus resolution for context, Samsung's very own m42 that costs upwards of rupees 20 000, has a HD plus display, so in the price range that the galaxy m32 operates in. If you actually want a higher refresh rate panel, then you will have to your know, compromise on the panel type and go for an IPS LCD panel. Instead, now, if you want an AMOLED panel, then you will have to compromise on the refresh rate and settle for 60 hertz. But yes, I am aware of the fact that for just r0000 mod you get the Redmi Note 10 pro, which actually comes with the 120 hertz AMOLED panel.

Anyway. The galaxy m32's display is a treat for your eyes, with slim bezels on three sides and a comparatively larger chin. You get rich vivid colors thanks to the deep blacks that look absolutely inviting from the get-go. It can also get really bright. I noticed it could reach up to 650 nits with the brightness slider set to maximum, but the phone has a capability to touch up to 800 nits when you take it in extreme brightness outdoors.

Essentially, the visibility outdoors is great. Plus you get corning's gorilla glass, 5 protection, which is nice, but yes, the infinity. U panel does feel a little odd in 2021. Considering a punch hole is all but the norm even in this price range. Another great addition to this display is the fact that you get support for 90 hertz, smooth refresh rate, while it is smooth for the most part.

I feel it is let down by the g80 system on chip. I definitely face some stutters while using the Discover feed in the minus one page in the quick settings panel on Twitter and a few other places moving on their support for wide wine l1. But in my testing period, Netflix only supported SD, playback Samsung says that there will be a fix soon, but my only gripe is there is no support for HDR playback, even in the YouTube app something quite a few phones under rupees 15000 can actually do. That would have just sweetened the deal regardless. This is a fantastic display now also, a part of the display is the haptic feedback and Samsung keeps it switched off by default, and that's because it is extremely soft, but in this price category do users really care about great haptic feedback.

Do let me know in the comment section below, if not Samsung's, one UI does provide a really natural sounding keypad sound, listen for yourself. A great typing sound, can also add to the sensory experience. It's not always about the vibration feedback, so actually typing on this phone does feel like a dream coming to the design. If you are thinking the m32 looks familiar, it is because it looks very similar to the Samsung Galaxy x62. The phone is made entirely of plastic, with a design flare in the form of vertical stripes, visible through the polycarbonate laminate.

Now this is an entirely glossy phone and feels oily to the touch. Apart from attracting smudges too there's a square camera module flush with the back, which is a good thing. What I like about the construction is that it feels sturdy and, despite the nine millimeter thickness, thanks to the large 6000 my battery inside the phone, it weighs under 200 grams. The ergonomics are great and conducive for single-handed usage too. By the way, the power button also doubles up as the side mounted fingerprint scanner, which is pretty fast to unlock the phone.

You also get a type-c port at the bottom, along with a headphone port. Now the sound quality through the headphone jack was good. Nothing to complain about, but the mono speaker is pretty average, and it doesn't sound really great. Let's not forget the galaxy m32 has a proper triple card slot with a slot for a memory card as well. I am sure that many buyers will appreciate this more than many other features.

So if you like our video, don't forget to hit that like button and maybe even comment below because YouTube algorithm values uh these metrics a lot, and it will help push this video to more people. Looking for a Samsung Galaxy m32 review, the galaxy m32 has a quad camera setup on the rear, which includes a 64 megapixel primary camera attached to an f by 1.8 lens, there's also an 8 megapixel, 123 degree, ultra-wide angle, camera 2, megapixel macro and a 2 megapixel depth shooter on the front. There's a 20 megapixel, selfie camera, the camera app is a standard. Samsung's fare with modes such as food mod ear doodle custom filters and more during my testing period. I noticed that the phone did take a little while to capture a picture, so you have to hold your hand, steady to take a shot in focus, or else you'll end up with a blurry one.

Anyway, I compared the picture shot on the Samsung Galaxy m32 against the Redmi Note 10 pro, and here is what I found when it comes to colors. Samsung is not exactly natural looking, but it comes really close compared to Redmi's algorithm. The red color of the iPhone case, despite tending towards orange in Samsung's shot, does a fairly better job of recreating the color compared to the pink rendition by the Redmi Note, 10 pro plus the Redmi Note.9 pro has an overall warm tone which is visible on the gray of the sofa as well so yeah, the galaxy m32 wins the color round in HDR mode Samsung tends to overdo the colors, especially if there is a blue sky. Evidently, the blue here is too blue in Samsung's pictures, and the building in the foreground has a pink overcast, which is very evident as well. Having said that, the highlight control is equally good on both the phones, but when it comes to retrieving details from the shadows, the galaxy m32 is just way better, which is further corroborated by the second sample here.

So dynamic range is better on the galaxy n32 as well. Now, when it comes to detail retention by the 12 megapixel pixel build samples of from the 64 mp. Cameras on these phones both are on different ends of the spectrum. Redmi's algorithm tends to over sharpen the texture, whereas Samsung's algorithm has soft details. The 8 megapixel ultra-wide angle, camera on the two phones capture very similar levels of detail in their respective samples.

Although the Redmi Note pro offers a slightly better dynamic range for what it is worth as for macros, there is no beating the Redmi phones in this department. The galaxy m32 shooter doesn't cut it here. It cannot go close or capture the kind of details that is possible. On the Redmi Note 10 pro in human subject pictures I noticed that the galaxy m32 offers a more natural facial tone, but the Redmi offers sharper textures, which is visible only on close crop. Although here Samsung does get the color of the t-shirt right as well.

In general, I prefer the human shots by Samsung phones over Xiaomi's Redmi phones. All the observations, including the facial tone, color and texture, is true for portraits as well. However, here Samsung's semantic segmentation, while great tends to refocus parts of the beard, something the iPhone tends to do as well, but it is not necessarily a bad method, just a safe way of ensuring a DSLR like look regardless. Both the software both approaches are fine. Moving on to selfies the galaxy m32 just beats the pants off the Redmi Note 10 pro from the color temperature accuracy to the facial tones to dynamic range performance.

The Redmi Note 10 pro cannot match up here and similarly in selfie portraits the overtly green cast is such an eyesore on the Redmi Note 10 pro. Evidently, the m32 is way better here as well. When it comes to target exposure and facial tone accuracy, semantic segmentation or the edge detection is equally impressive on both the phones, though, moving on to low light shots in the very first sample without night mode on. You can see that the Redmi Note 10 pro offers better light sensitivity. Plus the noise has been well controlled too.

The same holds true for the low light mode with night mode on Redmi's picture offers slightly sharper, textures and better light as well. The m32 captures really grainy textures with a lot of green luminance noise added the indoor night mode sample tells the same story, especially when you crop into the dining table on the rear, very surprising that Samsung hasn't worked hard on the algorithm of this phone to actually reduce the noise, which is weird in low light selfies. I prefer the non-night mode capture of the note 10 pro the best. It looks natural and doesn't make my face. Look like it is the moon.

The night mode once again in selfies, is really badly coated on the galaxy m32. The grainy noise on my face is definitely looking ugly. Although the Redmi Note 10 pro, doesn't do any better here either it is actually pretty bad. I'd suggest not using these cameras for low light selfies, unless you really cannot avoid it. Video recording is definitely not the Samsung Galaxy m32's forte here.

Not only does a phone shoot up to 1080p 30 fps max, it suffers from focus, hunting and bad dynamic range. The Redmi Note 10 pro offers 1080p 60fps and 4k 30fps video recording, plus the quality of footage, is undoubtedly better. Having said that, sound recording is actually equally good on both the Samsung Galaxy m32 can only shoot up to 1080p 30fps videos. It can't even do 1080p 60fps, which is a bit of a pity uh. The Redmi Note 10 pro, of course, can shoot.4K, 30fps and 1080p 60fps and quite a few other phones actually in this price range can shoot above 1080p, and you know 4k as well. However, when it comes to selfie videos, the sound recording the facial tones and the general target exposure is better on the galaxy m32.

The Redmi Note 10 pros only advantage is the stabilization option, but it is electronic image. Stabilization and that tends to crop into the face a lot I'd rather take the galaxy m32 footage here. So now, I'm shooting at 1080p 30fps video using the front camera on both these phones. I quite like the picture quality of I mean the colors of the Samsung Galaxy m32 over the Redmi Note 10 pro, and you know the facial tones, look pretty good as well, but of course the Redmi Note 10 pro can do image stabilization on the front camera which uh the Samsung Galaxy m32 cannot have said so, yeah the galaxy m32, a selfie performance is definitely better than the Redmi Note, 10 pro also in daylight, shots with great colors and good dynamic range performance. I generally prefer the pictures on the m32 compared to the Redmi Note 10 pro now, where the Redmi Note 10 pro actually takes a lead, is in the macro performance, low light shots and, of course, in you know, rear video recording performance as well.

So you have to figure out the modes that matter to you the most and make a choice. Accordingly, the Samsung Galaxy m32 runs on android 11, based on one UI 3.1. It is rich with features from Samsung pay mini to secure folder. You have some unique value ads that are not present on non-gaming phones. But yes, along with these value ads, you also get a lot of unwanted apps.

Pre-Installed evidently merge, MX, tokamak and share chat are part of some elaborate content deal plus Samsung also pushes you to use glance services on the lock screen of the galaxy m32. Another thing I noticed is the Samsung pay mini app, has ads running on the top panel, where Samsung heavily promotes its TV plus service, which, by the way, was also added as a widget by default on the home screen. When you know I started the phone also, you see that the app drawer has a Discover section that recommends apps and, hitting finish, will actually end up installing a bunch of pre-determined apps. I feel Samsung has managed to price this phone so low by partnering with so many apps and services. Now, thankfully, you can uninstall all of them, except for Netflix.

Now, if you can find some way to fine tune, your experience by switching off the stuff that you don't need- and you know removing a few bloatware apps, then one UI does, of course, actually provide a very premium experience compared to other mobile operating systems in the same price range for many folks watching this video, I am sure the hello g80 soc, must be a letdown, but it is Samsung we are talking about. This is the same brand that added g80 on the far more expensive a32. So I think this is not really a bad option now. Also, not everyone is a gamer. What we need to identify is if this phone can actually do day-to-day tasks properly and for the most part it can.

Let me explain: I did notice some stutters here and there and slow-downs too. Also, like I mentioned before, about the 90 hertz refresh rate, it is not really the smoothest one you experience here. The phone also scores low on benchmarks compared to other phones, with hello g95 and snapdragon 732 g processors, and even in gaming I tried Call of Duty and the max it could achieve was medium graphics and high frame rates. Casual games run fine on the phone, though 4g performance on the m32 was pretty good and solid, and the call quality was great too through the earpiece, but there's no support for 4g carrier aggregation, which is a downer indeed. It goes without saying that one of the biggest selling points of the galaxy m32 is its super large 6000 my battery.

It lasted me two days on a single charge easily, and you can easily get more than 10 hours of screen on time on a single charge. On moderate usage, the 15 watt charger takes about 2.5 hours to charge from 0 to 100, but you can spend some more money for the 25 watt charger to get faster charging speeds, and it should reduce the charging time down to you know 1.5 hours to two hours. But yes, this phone doesn't throttle at all, and it mostly runs at full grunt and doesn't heat up too much either. But that's expected from you know the g80 soc, which is not very powerful, barring the g80 soc and the encumbrances that it brings along with it. The Samsung Galaxy m32 is actually a great Samsung phone.

I particularly enjoyed using it, especially because it's got. You know that great display, excellent battery life and, of course, good camera performance in you know regular daylight usage as well. It does make a strong case for itself. Also, let's not forget that Samsung is actually offering you a sweet deal with ICICI and HDFC cards, which gives you an instant rupees, 1250 cashback, which means that the know, price of the phone goes down to rupees 13750 odd, for the base variant, and that is a very sweet deal. Having said that, we're going to evaluate the phone at the actual price, because not everyone has a HDLC or an ICICI card.

So who would I recommend the Samsung Galaxy m32 for definitely not the performance nerds or the gamers that make up a big chunk of our audience for sure this is for a Samsung fan or somebody who likes to stream a lot of content on Netflix and Amazon. Prime or you know, also watch YouTube for that matter. I can see a lot of parents actually enjoying the phone and for its focused approach. I feel that it should have a lot of takers and don't be surprised if this ends up becoming the most selling phone under rupees 15 000 in the next quarter. So is this the best only phone that I'm going to be recommending to everyone under of ten thousand most? Definitely not.

I don't think so. That's also because you know, I don't think that there is no one phone that is the best one under the rupees 15 000. There are just great viable alternatives and options in the form of the Poco x3, the motor g40 fusion, the Realme 8 and a few others. Now, if you can't spend rupees a thousand more the Redmi Note, 10 pro definitely makes a great case for itself. It offers you 6gb of ram in the base variant, which is more than what you get you know with the Samsung Galaxy m32 and, of course, you get a better display with 120 hertz AMOLED panel and, of course, HDR performance as well and, most importantly, it's got a snapdragon 732g processor, which is definitely way more powerful compared to the Samsung Galaxy m32.

Having said that, the battery performance- and, of course you know, the camera performance in daylight is definitely better on the Samsung Galaxy m32. All of these gets really confusing right, which is why I keep saying under rupees 20 000. When someone comes to me for a recommendation, I really cannot say there is a one phone fits all approach so yeah, so you have to figure out what really works for you and then make a decision. So let me know in the comment section below what are your priorities, so maybe we can help you find out what could be the best rupees 15 000 phone for you. So that's it for me.

I hope you liked our review of the Samsung Galaxy m32. Do let me know in the comment section below what you thought about it until next time this is Aisha from mysmartprice signing off goodbye and godspeed. My friends, you.


Source : MySmartPrice English

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