Samsung is soon coming out with a new Galaxy M-series phone, the Galaxy M32. It is a refresh of the Samsung Galaxy A32, featuring some tweaked specifications. Geekbench has the M32 listed on its database, alongside several system details.
You can find the M32 under its model name “SM-M325FV.” It has the MediaTek Helio G80 mobile platform at its heart and 6GB of memory. On its single-core tests, the Samsung Galaxy M32 scores 361 points. When engaging multiple cores, the benchmark hits 1254 points. To put these figures in context, the last-gen Galaxy M31 — running on Exynos silicon — manages 339 and 1106 points, respectively.
The Galaxy M32 is powered by a 6000 mAh battery, compared to the 5000 mAh cell inside the Galaxy A32. Since they’re both based on a similar specification sheet, the M32 could support 15W fast-charging.
In terms of design, the M32 has one of the better-looking builds from the Korean brand. The four cameras of the Samsung new model stick out the shell individually without a clunky camera plate in the way. There’s a notch bleeding into the screen, surrounded in rounded, thin bezels.
The specifics are yet to be confirmed, but we can use the A32 as a guide. It’s a 6.4” AMOLED panel that delivers a full HD resolution at a smooth 90Hz refresh rate. An optical fingerprint scanner is housed underneath the display. The notch encases a 20MP selfie camera. Flip the Galaxy M32 over to find a 64MP wide camera, an 8MP ultra-wide lens, and two 5MP macro and portrait sensors.
Availability and pricing details are unknown at the time of this writing, but since the phone has already been benchmarked and certified, its launch shouldn’t be far off. We’ll keep you posted as the Galaxy M32 story develops.