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Imagine reaching into a pocket and the earbuds sit perfectly level, ready to go. That small, almost throwaway convenience is where Samsung started when rethinking the Galaxy Buds4 and Buds4 Pro. The company asked users what mattered most — daily comfort, portability, and sound — and redesigned the earbuds from the outside in to answer that brief.

The case has been flattened so the earbuds lie snug and flat, making retrieval less fiddly. A transparent lid still lets you admire the new silhouette, but the real change is in the stems. The familiar triangular stalks gave way to flat, brushed-metal blades with an engraved touch surface that helps you find controls by feel. Pinch to accept. Swipe to skip. It sounds simple because it is.
Samsung didn’t stop at ergonomics. Audio was non-negotiable. The Buds4 Pro pack a refined two-way system — wider woofer, sharper tweeter — with drivers roughly 20% larger than their predecessors. In practice that means a fuller low end and clearer highs, and the hardware supports up to 24-bit, 96kHz playback for listeners who bring Hi‑Fi files to the table.
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The standard Buds4 lean into an open-fit design aimed at marathon wear. They promise breathability and comfort over long sessions, though open fits traditionally trade some ANC effectiveness for that ease. To counterbalance, both models use what Samsung calls Enhanced Adaptive ANC, which doesn’t simply silence everything equally. The system selectively lowers drone-like noises such as engine hum while preserving critical sounds like sirens, so you stay aware when it counts. Call quality gets a bump too: Super Clear Call delivers up to 16kHz audio and aggressive noise suppression for clearer conversations in noisy places.
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Color choices are straightforward—Buds4 come in Black and White, while the Buds4 Pro add an online-exclusive Pink Gold. Compatibility is broad; the buds will pair with any smartphone. But Galaxy owners get extra polish. Pairing can be handled without an app, with Quick Panel controls offering a volume slider, ANC toggles, and an ambient sound dial right in the notification area. Samsung also keeps experimenting with hands-free gestures: nod to answer a call, shake your head to decline. Bixby integration lets you control smart-home devices, and an Interpreter feature provides real-time translation across multiple languages, which may prove handy on trips.

Availability starts with pre-orders now and a hard launch on March 11, coinciding with the Galaxy S26 series. Pricing holds steady: the Buds4 start at $180/€180, and the Buds4 Pro at $250/€250 — the same tags as last year’s models. In a market where incremental tweaks often pass as innovation, Samsung has chosen to refine the everyday moments that add up: how the case feels in your pocket, how the stem responds under your thumb, and how sound adapts to the world around you. Small changes, but the kind you notice after a few songs or a noisy commute.
Source: gsmarena






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