Samsung’s A series includes a variety of smartphones, from entry-level to high-end mid-range. The Samsung Galaxy A03 Core is located at the left-most end of this spectrum. It’s a low-end phone with fundamental functionality geared toward casual users. Despite the fact that there haven’t been many smartphones released recently in this price range, the Redmi 9A and the Realme C20 are among of the market’s top competitors.
This is something the Galaxy A03 Core chipset does. Here, Samsung has employed a 3-year-old chip manufactured on a 28nm technology called the Unisoc SC9863A. Because of this, we had serious doubts about its performance standard. Having said that, we are also aware that benchmark scores or CPU power alone cannot accurately predict a phone’s performance. It also has a significant impact on the software operating on top of it. Thankfully, Samsung has made significant progress in this area. Instead of the conventional Android 11-based One UI, which is simply too demanding for a beginner phone like this, the Galaxy A03 Core ships with Android 11 Go Edition with One UI core on top.
[content-egg-block template=offers_logo hide=price]A single 8MP back camera and a 5MP front camera are both featured on the Samsung Galaxy A03 Core. I like that it doesn’t pretend to have many cameras on the back like we see on other phones of a similar price range, which is a good point about its camera design. (However, remember that even if they do have an additional camera, they invariably end up being worthless on low-cost phones.)
The smartphone can play simple games fairly smoothly when used for gaming. However, you shouldn’t use the phone to play demanding games like PUBG Mobile. The experience is far from flawless, although the phone does offer playable frames per second in the lowest settings. One of the Samsung Galaxy A03 Core’s key selling factors is its long battery life. Its 5000mAh battery readily lasted me more than a day. I wouldn’t be shocked if the battery lasted for even two to three days for light users. One drawback is that the phone only has a 7.75W charger, thus charging it takes a while. Over 3 hours pass before it is fully charged.
A dual-SIM phone that can take both Nano-SIM and Nano-SIM cards is the Samsung Galaxy A03 Core. The dimensions of the Samsung Galaxy A03 Core are 164.20 x 75.90 x 9.10mm. Blue and Black were the colours used for the launch. Wi-Fi and Micro-USB are two of the Samsung Galaxy A03 Core’s connectivity options. The phone has an accelerometer, a light sensor for ambient light, and a proximity sensor.