Samsung Galaxy S21 Ultra Renders Leaked, Tilted to Come with Hole-Punch Display


The Samsung Galaxy S21 series is expected to launch earlier than usual next year, and the leaks have now started to accelerate. Renders of the Samsung Galaxy S21 Ultra were leaked by prominent insider OnLeaks. A 360-degree video of the Samsung Galaxy S21 Ultra was also shared, showing the design of the smartphone from all sides. A separate leak showed the phone’s screen up close.

OnLeaks posted a 360-degree rendered video of the Samsung Galaxy S21 Ultra on Voice. The video shows the phone from all angles. The phone is expected to come with a hole-punch display or an Infinity-O display, as Samsung likes to call it. The cutout is placed in the top center. The edges of the two sides of the screen are also slightly curved. The bottom has a USB Type-C port, a microphone, and a speaker grille. The volume and power buttons are located on the right edge and the upper edge houses a slot for a SIM tray.

The Samsung Galaxy S21 Ultra is expected to come with a quad rear camera setup with flash support, housed within a protruding module. The Samsung logo is located at the bottom of the back panel. Samsung Galaxy S21 Ultra may have a glossy black finish on the back, according to the video.

A seperation escape by tipster Ice universe on Twitter shows only the front screen of the Samsung Galaxy S21 Ultra. The phone is seen with an Infinity-O display, similar to the one seen in the video. The slim bezels run on all sides of the screen, with slightly curved edges. The render also suggests that the volume and power buttons are on the right side of the screen.

The Samsung Galaxy S21 series is expected to feature three models: the vanilla Samsung Galaxy S21, the Samsung Galaxy S21 +, and the Samsung Galaxy S21 Ultra. Samsung Galaxy S21 and Samsung Galaxy S21 + are tipped to come with flat screens, while the premium model is tipped to come with curved edges, as seen in these new leaks.


Is this the end of the Samsung Galaxy Note series as we know it? We talked about this on Orbital, our weekly tech podcast, which you can subscribe to via Apple Podcasts, Google Podcasts, or RSS, download the episode, or just hit the play button below.

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