Samsung Galaxy A54 High-quality Renders Leaked Showcasing a New Camera Setup

Sohail Akhtar

The aged Samsung Galaxy A53, following its well-heeled global trip, will finally get replaced by the Samsung Galaxy A54 in early 2023. Pre-mature gossip point to an incoming launch by the end of January next year. Although the Korean chain is mum about it, rumor-verse has dug up some enticing and credible design-revealing images of A54. Have a look.


In collaboration with 91mobiles, the infamous tipster OnLeaks gave away the Galaxy A54's blueprint via high-quality renders. Since it's Samsung's current innuendo to launch rehashed chassis in new generation phones, most of you won't find it surprising that A54's design mostly aligns with the parent Galaxy A53.

Renders showcase a triple camera setup on A54's back, meaning the 4th sensor from A53 will not pass down to its descendent. In addition to the vanished sensor, the slightly raised camera profile from A53 will also get offloaded by the newcomer to favor a flat chassis.


Towards the front, users will find a uniformly-spanned 6.4-inch AMOLED screen on Samsung's latest 5G model. The Galaxy A54 will inherit the 120Hz refresh rate and FHD+ resolution from A53. A simple power key teams with a volume rocker on its beveled edges, indicating a screen-embedded fingerprint reader.


Rumor mill reports that A54's primary 50MP camera will replace A53's traditional 64MP shooter. There's still no word about the accompanying sensors or the selfie camera. The phone is also bulkier than its forerunner, clocking in at 8.2mm, indicative of a lightly extended 5100mAh battery. 

With nothing interesting to cover, A54 has already appeared in the Chinese 3C listing, a tell-tale sign of an en-route launch. The point of concern in Pakistan right now is the inflating costs of the handsets. The last year's Samsung Galaxy A32 price in Pakistan is now around Rs. 50,000 so a handset like A54 with the above-mentioned features would easily cross the PKR 100,000 barrier. Ahead of any official announcement, more leaks are bound to surface, and we'll cover most of them. So stay tuned in.      


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