
These are the Galaxy S25 Edge colors and this is the one to buy
Table of Contents
Table of Contents Titanium is all the rage Titanium Jet Black Titanium Silver Titanium Icy Blue Which Galaxy S25 Edge color should you buy?
Thin is officially IN, and Samsung has laid a marker with the new Galaxy S25 Edge. At just 5.8 mm thick, it's the thinnest modern smartphone, and at 163 grams, it's lighter than all the best phones you can buy right now.
Andy Boxall went hands-on with the Galaxy S25 Edge and is smitten. If that's also you, you may wonder which colors it's available in and which one to buy. Fear not — I also went hands-on, and here's a more thorough look at all the different Galaxy S25 Edge colors and which one you should buy!
Titanium is all the rage
Since every smartphone maker started adopting a titanium build, the infamous song from David Guetta has never left my head. As it turns out, it will stay there as Titanium isn't going anywhere, and Samsung has also clad its new thin and lightweight phone with Titanium.
Recommended Videos
The Galaxy S25 Edge is available in three colors: Titanium Jet Black, Titanium Silver, and Titanium Icy Blue.
Each of these is unique. In particular, the Jet Black is matte and gorgeous and photographs surprisingly well, unlike most black phones. All three feature color-matched frames, although the Icy Blue one appears to be far more subtle.
Titanium Jet Black
Unlike most black phones, this one appears lighter, almost as if some hues of blue were mixed into the dyeing process. It's beautiful to look at, reflects light extremely well, and doesn't seem to attract too many fingerprints.
Of course, time will tell how durable this finish is, especially as some black phones can scratch easily, but it's my second-favorite color and likely the most popular of the Galaxy S25 Edge colors.
Titanium Silver
This finish appears to be a natural titanium color, so it's not the silver color you may associate with the word 'silver,' but rather a more natural hue. In some photos, it appears gold or rose gold in color, while in others, it seems to be silver.
If you like the natural titanium finish on the iPhone 16 Pro series, you'll also almost certainly like this color. If you want a phone that doesn't stand out too much, this is probably the color to go for, although it does appear to be a fingerprint magnet.
Titanium Icy Blue
My favorite is the Titanium Icy Blue, although the Jet Black is a close second. It matches a light blue rear Gorilla Glass Victus panel with an even subtler blue/silver titanium frame for a subtle but gorgeous color.
In particular, I love the blue finish on the rear, which helps it stand out, as there aren't too many phones that use the same color. However, I'm concerned about whether this will withstand scratching, especially as the lighter color is likely to show deep scratches.
Which Galaxy S25 Edge color should you buy?
It's disappointing that Samsung didn't choose to outfit the Galaxy S25 Edge with a range of bolder colors. The company also doesn't offer any additional custom colors via its website. This means you're stuck with one of these three colors, regardless of where or in which configuration you buy it.
I like these three colors in this order: Titanium Icy Blue, Jet Black, and a distant third, Titanium Silver. The Icy Blue is striking, the Jet Black is beautiful, and the Silver will appeal to some, even if it's not my preferred choice.
Which color do you prefer for the Galaxy S25 Edge, and which do you plan to buy? Don't miss some of the best Galaxy S25 Edge pre-order deals to save on your new phone, and if you're not sure about Samsung's new Galaxy S25 thin phone, check out our Galaxy S25 Edge hands-on for more information!
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles
Yahoo
44 minutes ago
- Yahoo
Why ASML is the Most Important Stock You've Never Owned
In the vast tech ecosystem, one under-the-radar titan powers the future of nearly every major chipmaker: ASML Holding (ASML). Far more than just a semiconductor equipment supplier, ASML is a technological gatekeeper, a geopolitical linchpin, and arguably one of the most overlooked long-term growth stories in public markets. Easily unpack a company's performance with TipRanks' new KPI Data for smart investment decisions Receive undervalued, market resilient stocks right to your inbox with TipRanks' Smart Value Newsletter Despite ongoing concerns around industry cyclicality and China-related headwinds, ASML continues to solidify its dominance in a space where it faces virtually no actual competition. As 2026 draws nearer, investors may want to tune out the noise and focus on what's unfolding beneath the surface—a company poised to enter a fresh multi-year growth phase, fueled by its unmatched 'NA EUV' technology and a rising tide of national semiconductor reshoring efforts. I remain bullish on ASML, as the company is still in the early stages of commercializing its core offering. Let's begin with what might be the most open secret in tech: ASML has no true rivals when it comes to extreme ultraviolet (EUV) lithography. None. It is the sole manufacturer of these incredibly complex machines, which are essential for producing chips at the most advanced process nodes. Whether it's the cutting-edge processors powering AI data centers or flagship smartphones, chances are they were built using ASML's EUV technology. These machines don't come cheap. A single EUV scanner can cost upwards of $200 million, contains over 100,000 precision-engineered parts, and takes more than a year to assemble. Yet, chipmaking giants like TSMC (TSM), Intel (INTC), and Samsung (SSNLF) have no alternatives—they simply queue up and wait. That exclusivity has allowed ASML to build a massive moat, not through pricing power alone, but through an unmatched technological lead. Even deep-pocketed rivals like Nikon ($NINOY, $NINOF) and Canon (CAJPY) have exited the EUV race entirely. ASML doesn't just lead the market—it is the market. Concerns about export restrictions, particularly involving China, have surfaced in recent quarters. While it's true that China accounted for 29% of ASML's 2023 revenue, no EUV machines have ever been shipped there. The tighter Dutch export controls—largely encouraged by U.S. pressure—mainly apply to high-end DUV tools. Though valuable, these sales were never the cornerstone of ASML's long-term strategy. Instead, ASML is increasingly aligned with Western and Taiwanese industrial priorities, shifting its geopolitical exposure toward greater long-term stability. What was once viewed as a liability has now become a strategic recalibration—one that positions ASML to thrive at the intersection of technology leadership and national security imperatives. What remains undercounted and underestimated with ASML is how much their business behaves like a high-end service platform. With over 1,500 tools installed globally, ASML's installed base garners a steady stream of recurring revenues from a combination of long-term service contracts, field upgrades, and performance enhancements. In 2024, approximately 23% of total revenue was generated from these activities, and I anticipate that number to rise. This implies that ASML is no more a cyclical, lumpy machinery business, but rather a capital equipment company with platform-like economics. This means big upfront average selling prices with decades of sticky, high-margin service revenue to follow. That flywheel will only be stronger with High-NA systems in the field. Once ASML's tools are deployed in a manufacturing facility, they become mission-critical and highly profitable to service and maintain. The market appears to be pricing ASML as a cyclical capital expenditures name rather than a structural enabler of Moore's Law. Despite a monopoly-like economic structure, ASML currently trades at approximately 30x forward earnings, with a PEG of just under 1.5 and a free cash flow yield of around 3%. Therefore, the stock price is reasonable—and I'd say cheap—for a company with this kind of visibility, pricing power, and strategic relevance. The only thing investors need to make this investment work out is patience, perseverance, and a tolerance to withstand geopolitical risks. I understand that the markets are fraught with tension due to the China-U.S. relationship surrounding semiconductors, but I'm bullish on reconciliation soon and a peaceful path to coexistence. As such, I'm staying invested despite the current market trepidation. According to analysts, ASML has a consensus Strong Buy rating based on three Buys, zero Holds, and zero Sells. The average ASML stock price target is $905, implying a ~21% upside over the next 12 months. I'm more bullish and could easily see the stock trading at $1,100 as macro strength creates investor confidence. Easing tensions between China and the U.S. would signal to markets that it is safe to begin allocating capital fearlessly again in both the East and the West. ASML is a stealthy compounder with an unbreakable technology moat. While others sell grand visions, ASML builds the reality behind them. It's indispensable in the chipmaking ecosystem, boasting resilient economics and technology that's far ahead of the pack. By 2026, investors are poised to see substantial returns as high-NA EUV moves from pilot to full production, sovereign chip foundries ramp up in the U.S. and Europe, and service revenues continue to scale rapidly. ASML offers a powerful blend of secular growth and strategic tailwinds—yet the market still prices it at a discount, for now. If you haven't been paying attention, now is the time. This is the company that makes the entire chip world possible. Quiet, relentless, and precise, ASML leads the way behind the scenes. Disclaimer & DisclosureReport an Issue Error in retrieving data Sign in to access your portfolio Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data


Bloomberg
an hour ago
- Bloomberg
Latin America: Underowned, Undervalued and Poorly Labeled
If I told you there's a country with more than 1,000 robots for every 10,000 workers—and another with barely more than 100 per, which would you guess is classified as an emerging market? You'd likely be wrong. In 2023 it was the UK that had only 119 robots per 10,000 workers. South Korea meanwhile had 1,012. But for some reason, MSCI classifies the latter as an emerging market, just as it does Poland, Chile, Brazil, Taiwan, the UAE and China.


Forbes
an hour ago
- Forbes
Samsung Confirms Upgrade Choice—Galaxy Users Must Now Decide
This decision defines the future of your phone. Republished on June 7 with reports into Google's new decision for Android users. A timely warning from Samsung this week, which neatly sets out the biggest upgrade decision now facing Android users. As whispers start to spread suggesting a disconnect between Samsung and Google at the heart of Android, this is critical. We're talking AI and the new features and offerings now hitting phones and PCs at breakneck speed. This is where Galaxy has an advantage, Samsung says, 'in privacy-first, AI-powered experiences' which can 'protect you in the era of AI.' The question the Galaxy-maker asks in its latest post is the right one: 'This level of personalization' brought by AI 'can be incredibly helpful, but the more your phone knows, the more there is to protect. So, what's keeping all that personal data secure?' Samsung's answer is Knox. 'Every Galaxy device is protected from the chip up by a multi-layered approach, which includes on-device personalization, user-controlled cloud processing, and ecosystem-wide protection through Samsung Knox Matrix.' This is Samsung's secure ecosystem that is the closest replica to Apple's securely walled garden currently available on Android. 'At the core of this system is Samsung Knox Vault, Samsung's hardware-based solution for your most sensitive information.' Knox is not new and neither is the concept of hardware-enabled Galaxy data security. What is new is segmenting sensitive the latest AI-related data from the rest, and securing that alongside the more traditional PINs, passwords and credit card numbers. 'Location service metadata from your most personal photos,' Samsung says, 'could easily give away the exact location where the image was taken.' And there's not much data more sensitive than who did what, where and when. 'In the era of AI, personal information like your home address, face clustering ID, person ID, pet type, scene type and more need to be encrypted and stored in a safe location. These things aren't just files — they are deeply connected to your daily life.' It's unclear exactly what is being or will be segmented and how this plays into the various opt-ins that Samsung has added to distinguish between on-device and cloud AI, between what is only within your secure enclave and what is outside. But it's difficult not to read this push as a play against the latest announcements from Google and the cloud-based AI that will now run riot across sensitive data, including emails and even cloud data storage. Yes, there are always opt-outs, but it's all or nothing for users who want AI but are not yet worrying about privacy. 'As Galaxy AI becomes more useful,' Samsung says, 'it also becomes more personal — learning how you use your device and adapting to your needs… Knox Vault is more than a security feature, it's Galaxy's promise that no matter how advanced your devices become, or how much AI evolves, your privacy is secured.' Google, meanwhile, will not make this decision easy for Samsung user. No one is rolling out new smartphone AI innovations faster, and it will always overshadow what can be done if users take a privacy-centric, device-only approach. Per Android Police, the latest update is 'Google's Gemini replacing Google Assistant as the default AI assistant, taking on all digital assistance responsibilities as Assistant is phased out later this year. Gemini is gaining 'Scheduled Actions,' allowing users to automate recurring tasks and information delivery at specific times.' This is the stepping stone to so-called Agenctic AI on phones, where monitoring data and events and activities enables an agent to make decisions autonomously on a smartphone owner's behalf. This next step, with 'Scheduled Actions streamlining routines [and] offering personalized updates,' is just the start. As Mashable says, 'When combined with computer vision, which is what allows a model to 'see' a user's screen, we get the agentic AI everyone is so excited about… Agentic AI tools could order groceries online, browse and buy the best-reviewed espresso machine for you, or even research and book vacations. In fact, Google is already taking steps in this direction with its new AI shopping experience.' Allowing AI access to smartphones with all the data and insight they contain, pushed this to a level even beyond Windows's controversial Recall. It's decision time.