Samsung is retrieving all its samples of its collapsible Foldy phone, which it distributed to technical journalists for review, to investigate reports of problems with the device screen, a day after it announced a delay in the global launch of the phone, Reuters reported Tuesday, This.

The recovery comes after the company, the world's largest smart phone manufacturer, was embarrassed to see the launch of its collapsible phone in the United States on April 26, with reports for technical reporters about a crash, bloating or trembling on the phone screen a day later, Of use.

Samsung announced yesterday the postponement of the launch of the phone in China, which was supposed to be launched today in Hong Kong and tomorrow Wednesday in Shanghai.

But the company seems to have expanded to delay the launch of the phone - which was supposed to mark the beginning of the era of folding phones - worldwide indefinitely, and said it would announce a new date "in the coming weeks" after the investigation is completed.

Samsung said in a statement on Monday: "Preliminary results from screen-reported screen problems showed that they could be linked to impact in the upper and lower exposed areas of the joint, and there was also a case where material inside the device affected screen performance."

Shares of Samsung fell 0.4% this morning in the Korean market, while the shares of the company "QH Vatic" provided for the joints of the screen by 3.1%.

Reuters quoted a person with direct access to the supply chain as saying that the company HS Vatic conducted an internal review of the joints used in the Galaxy and found no defects.

In contrast, Huawei enthusiasts are waiting for the Chinese company to launch its collapsible rival Myit X, which seems to have had a chance of success that was not in the company's account (in the event of no problems with its handset either) after Samsung's setback.