Apple's iPhone Fold vs Foldables: A Wide New Take in 2026

Mockups show Apple's iPhone Fold adopting a wider, landscape-first foldable design. See how it compares to Samsung's Galaxy Z Fold7 and TriFold, and Huawei's Pura X — and why rivals may copy the format.

Chloe Nakamura Chloe Nakamura . Comments
Apple's iPhone Fold vs Foldables: A Wide New Take in 2026

3 Minutes

Leaks and mockups keep teasing Apple’s first foldable — the iPhone Fold — and one thing is clear: it won’t look or behave like most of the foldables we've seen so far. Its folded shape is noticeably wide, and when opened it flips straight into a landscape-oriented screen rather than a squarer tablet.

A different kind of fold

Compared side-by-side with Samsung’s Galaxy Z Fold7, the iPhone Fold looks smaller overall when unfolded, but far more rectangular. That wider aspect ratio pushes content into a more cinematic layout, which could make the device especially appealing for video, gaming, and multitasking in landscape.

The Galaxy Z TriFold is the outlier in this crowd: it unfolds into a near-10-inch tablet by using two hinges, so its footprint and aspect ratio are different by design. The iPhone Fold doesn’t aim for tablet parity — it favors a single, broad canvas that opens into landscape from the start.

Then there’s Huawei’s Pura X, a flip-style device with an unusually wide screen. Placed next to the iPhone Fold, the Pura X highlights how varied the foldable market has become: different hinge systems, different folding directions, and different aspect-ratio experiments. The iPhone Fold, while folding the opposite way from the Pura X, shares that willingness to try something visually unconventional.

Mockups like these underline the iPhone Fold’s unique form factor. It’s a rare design that we haven’t seen exactly replicated elsewhere — at least not yet. And yet, Apple’s influence in hardware trends is strong: rumors already suggest that Samsung and Oppo could be preparing wider book-style foldables of their own if Apple’s approach proves popular.

Whether the iPhone Fold’s wide, landscape-first layout becomes a new standard or just a short-lived experiment depends on real-world use: apps optimized for a wider aspect, battery and durability trade-offs, and consumer appetite for a nontraditional fold. One thing’s certain — the foldable phone race is getting more interesting, and the arrival of Apple in that arena will force makers to rethink proportions, not just hinges.

Source: gsmarena

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