Skip to Content
The Daily Dot home
The Daily Dot home
Advertisement
Culture

This YouTuber is folding a Galaxy Z Fold 7 over 200,000 times by hand just to see what will break

A South Korean YouTuber from the tech-it channel is manually opening and closing the Samsung Galaxy Z Fold 7 200K times live on stream. The experiment, now well underway, has drawn both tech enthusiasts and casual viewers alike, many of whom are tuning in to see which breaks first: the foldable phone or the person folding it.

Featured Video

While machines typically handle stress tests like these, the tech-it team opted for a human approach. The host is sitting in front of the camera, folding and unfolding the Z Fold 7 completely by hand while talking to the audience in Korean. Viewers may wince at the repeated motion, but it’s all in the name of science, or at least consumer awareness.

One man, one foldable phone, 200,000 reps

The YouTube channel's goal is 200K folds, and according to one livestream's caption, the team aims to hit 40K to 50K folds per day. That is hours of continuous, repetitive motion, entirely unaided by machinery. The caption also notes that the test is done manually "to make it similar to the actual usage environment." They noted, "The Galaxy Z Fold 7 is now thinner and lighter—But how strong is the hinge, really?"

Advertisement
Screenshot of the 200k Samsung Galaxy Z Fold 7 livestream.
@테킷-techit/YouTube

At the moment of writing, five days into the project, the fold count is just over 194K. Despite that intense number, the device still appears to function. Although, as noted on screen, there have been a number of issues that have cropped up. These include a reboot error at 6K folds, "creaking sound from the hinge" at 46K folds, "unidentified liquid from the hinge" at 75K, and, most recently, the speaker has broken as of 175K folds.

It’s important to point out that Samsung Display officially rates the Galaxy Z Fold 7’s internal screen for 500K folds. In the disclaimer on the website, however, the company noted that this durability excludes a few key components. "Advanced Armor Aluminum frame does not include volume and side keys, SIM tray or camera lens barrel."

So while this YouTube stunt may seem extreme, it’s only reaching about 40% of the phone’s tested endurance. The host of the stream, additionally, takes the time to stretch his arms at each thousand-milestone. He has slowed down significantly as he gets closer to his end goal.

Advertisement

Moreover, the video has already sparked a broader conversation about the longevity of foldable phones. Although skepticism still surrounds the practicality of folding devices, demonstrations like this can offer some peace of mind.

Additionally, some people in the chat joked that this is "the world's first IT channel mukbang." This is referencing a popular style of live stream where the host consumes an excessive amount of food while talking to the audience.

The internet is chaotic—but we’ll break it down for you in one daily email. Sign up for the Daily Dot’s newsletter here.

Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement

Stay in touch

Sign up for our free newsletter

More from The Daily Dot

See all posts

“I am not dating a chatbot”: Zach Braff dismisses claims that he is romantically involved with an AI chatbot

The response comes after months-long speculation over a blind item stating an unnamed A-list actor is romantically involved with his AI.

March 13, 2026

Hunter Woodhall calls out disappointing lack of Paralympics coverage: “It’s like y’all not even trying”

"This is like some of the craziest stuff humans will ever do, and we can't even put a crew there to film it," he said shocked.

March 13, 2026

White House prayer video sparks a meme parody trend in China. America is the punchline, of course

"Business owners are gathering their employees, forming circles, and jokingly praying for… better sales and higher bonuses?"

March 13, 2026

Trump praises, then immediately disses, the way Obama “bops down stairs”…again

Does he love it or hate it? The president can't seem to decide.

March 13, 2026