A new Samsung Galaxy S23 leak suggests the Korean tech giant isn’t planning to change the RAM and storage configurations.
The Galaxy S23 series color variants recently popped up on the internet. Now, key details about the upcoming high-end smartphones’ RAM and storage configurations have been revealed.
Tipster Ahmed Qwaider claims Samsung Galaxy S23 and the Galaxy S23+ will be available in two memory configurations. This includes 8GB RAM + 256GB storage and 8GB RAM + 512GB storage.
⭕️Final update
DDR5X🔥No DDR5😉
One and a half times betterGalaxy S23 Ultra
8Ram+256G
12R+256G+512G+1TThe most common version in the countries of world 12R+256G
Galaxy S23/S23+
8R+256G
8R+512GCommon version 8R+256G
There is a version that will show 128G
Very few countries https://t.co/Ly9WEdAPg8— Ahmed Qwaider (@AhmedQwaider888) January 9, 2023
The 8GB RAM and 256GB storage variant will be the most commonly available version, according to a report by SamMobile. The Galaxy S23 Ultra, on the other hand, will come in four configurations including an 8GB RAM + 256GB storage model.
Samsung Galaxy S23 Series: What To Expect?
Also, you can go for the 12GB RAM + 256GB storage, 12GB RAM + 512GB storage, and 12GB RAM + 1TB storage variants.
Moreover, the report claims the 12GB RAM and 256GB storage options will be sold more than the other variants. Samsung might bring 128GB versions of the Galaxy S23 and the Galaxy S23+ to some regions.
Most countries will get the 256GB base storage model. Noted tipster Ice Universe has corroborated this piece of information.
This is the expected configuration. https://t.co/0hfBPno62H
— Ice universe (@UniverseIce) January 9, 2023
The Korean tech giant is prepping to equip the Galaxy S23 lineup with upgraded RAM and storage. Notably, the new S-series phones will come with LPDDR5X RAM, which is 50 percent faster than LPDDR5 RAM.
Aside from this, the company will be upgrading storage speeds with the next flagship phones. The Galaxy S23 series will reportedly offer UFS 4.0 storage which delivers sequential read speeds of 4,200Mbps and sequential write speeds of up to 2,800Mbps.
That’s two times faster as compared to the UFS 3.1 storage’s 2,100Mbps sequential read speeds and 1,200Mbps sequential write speeds.