
Samsung Galaxy S7 is an excellent phone. It's a phone that SmartSmart battery packs, excellent camera capabilities and loads of raw power into an increasingly affordable package.
Even though Samsung has replaced the Galaxy S7 with the new Galaxy S8, it's still worth taking a look at the 2016 Samsung flagship phone for your next big purchase. The price is starting to drop very dramatically, and the Galaxy S8 lacks the killer feature that makes it essential to have the Galaxy S7.
The design is similar to the 2015 Galaxy S6 - some mean the Galaxy S7 should be called the Galaxy S6S - but this in-depth review shows there is a lot going under the hood to complement the improved design.
If you are looking for a curved phone variant of this design, the Galaxy S7 doesn't compete as closely with the Galaxy S7 edge as the S6 did with the S6 Edge, with the curved display variant getting a bump in the screen size this time round, taking it more in the land of the phablet.
(Update: Good news for those who commented on the guaranteed Samsung Galaxy S7: Android Oreo is coming ... at some point Samsung is currently overloading the beta program for Samsung Galaxy S8, but it should make its way into months in the future, and better yet, you can get one of the These phones are still awesome for a drop than ever before with our curated selection of the best Samsung Galaxy S7 deals.)
In the UK, you are looking at £ 420 in fee-free, while those in the US will have to charge $ 199 up front as part of a two-year contract, or offload more than $ 440 for the price of the Samsung Galaxy S7. In Australia the price of free sim is set at 1149 USD but now you can get it for around 700 USD.
The price has dropped significantly after the launch of the Samsung Galaxy S8 which makes this a great price for a five-star phone - see how much you'll need to spend on your contract in our best Galaxy S7 deal.
Although there is the latest Samsung Galaxy S8, it's hard not to like the Galaxy S7. It takes a very improved design, a premium from the Galaxy S6 and brings back some of the features from the Galaxy S5 that were traumatically missing from behind.
The bundle is an interesting one, but 2016 has been a tough year for flagship phones, so Samsung needs something big to stay ahead. The LG G5 launched with a unique but failed modular pull, the HTC 10 seemed to revive some of the company's former Taiwanese glories (with mixed success), and of course, the iPhone 7 landed with no headphone jack and water leakage to match the Galaxy S7's similar capacity.
Samsung may be the first of its flagship blocks, but it needed to make the most of a solid start to stay ahead of the pack.
Watch the video of the Samsung Galaxy S7
https://youtu.be/EHW5nUbllAM
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