Doogee Note 59 Pro
Samsung Galaxy A56 5G (256GB / 8GB RAM)

Doogee Note 59 Pro Samsung Galaxy A56 5G (256GB / 8GB RAM)

Overview

Welcome to our in-depth spec comparison between the Doogee Note 59 Pro and the Samsung Galaxy A56 5G (256GB / 8GB RAM). Both phones arrive with the same 256GB storage, 8GB RAM, 120Hz refresh rate, and Android 15, yet they take very different paths when it comes to display quality, camera versatility, battery strategy, and everyday connectivity. Read on to discover which device better suits your priorities.

Common Features

  • Both phones share the same width of 77.5 mm.
  • Neither phone has a rugged build.
  • Neither phone can be folded.
  • Both displays have a 120Hz refresh rate.
  • Neither phone supports Dolby Vision.
  • Neither phone has a secondary screen.
  • Both phones have a touch screen.
  • Both phones come with 256GB of internal storage.
  • Both phones have 8GB of RAM.
  • Both phones have integrated LTE.
  • Both phones support 64-bit processing.
  • Both phones have integrated graphics.
  • Both phones use big.LITTLE technology.
  • Neither phone has a dual-tone LED flash, with each having a single flash LED.
  • Neither phone has a BSI sensor.
  • Both phones have a CMOS sensor.
  • Both phones support continuous autofocus when recording movies.
  • Both phones have phase-detection autofocus for photos.
  • Both phones support slow-motion video recording.
  • Both phones have a built-in HDR mode.
  • Both phones run Android 15.
  • Both phones have clipboard warnings.
  • Both phones have location privacy options.
  • Both phones have camera and microphone privacy options.
  • Neither phone has Mail Privacy Protection.
  • Both phones have theme customization.
  • Both phones can block app tracking.
  • Neither phone blocks cross-site tracking.
  • Neither phone supports wireless charging.
  • Both phones support fast charging.
  • Neither phone has a removable battery.
  • Both phones have a battery level indicator.
  • Both phones have a rechargeable battery.
  • Neither phone has LDAC support.
  • Neither phone has aptX Lossless support.
  • Neither phone has a built-in radio.
  • Both phones support 5G.
  • Both phones have a USB Type-C connector with USB version 2.
  • Both phones have NFC.
  • Both phones have a fingerprint scanner.
  • Neither phone has emergency SOS via satellite.
  • Neither phone has crash detection.
  • Neither phone is DLNA-certified.
  • Both phones have a video light.
  • Neither phone has a sapphire glass display.
  • Neither phone has a curved display.
  • Neither phone has an e-paper display.
  • Both phones support Wi-Fi 4 (802.11n) and Wi-Fi 5 (802.11ac).
  • Both phones support dual SIM cards.
  • Both phones have the main camera at 50 MP with an aperture of f/1.8.

Main Differences

  • Water resistance is present on Samsung Galaxy A56 5G (256GB / 8GB RAM) but not available on Doogee Note 59 Pro.
  • Weight is 199 g on Doogee Note 59 Pro and 198 g on Samsung Galaxy A56 5G (256GB / 8GB RAM).
  • Thickness is 8.6 mm on Doogee Note 59 Pro and 7.4 mm on Samsung Galaxy A56 5G (256GB / 8GB RAM).
  • Height is 168 mm on Doogee Note 59 Pro and 162.2 mm on Samsung Galaxy A56 5G (256GB / 8GB RAM).
  • Volume is 111.972 cm³ on Doogee Note 59 Pro and 93.0217 cm³ on Samsung Galaxy A56 5G (256GB / 8GB RAM).
  • Display type is LCD IPS on Doogee Note 59 Pro and OLED/AMOLED on Samsung Galaxy A56 5G (256GB / 8GB RAM).
  • Screen size is 6.75″ on Doogee Note 59 Pro and 6.7″ on Samsung Galaxy A56 5G (256GB / 8GB RAM).
  • Pixel density is 260 ppi on Doogee Note 59 Pro and 385 ppi on Samsung Galaxy A56 5G (256GB / 8GB RAM).
  • Resolution is 720 x 1600 px on Doogee Note 59 Pro and 1080 x 2340 px on Samsung Galaxy A56 5G (256GB / 8GB RAM).
  • Damage-resistant glass is present on Samsung Galaxy A56 5G (256GB / 8GB RAM) but not available on Doogee Note 59 Pro.
  • HDR10 support is present on Samsung Galaxy A56 5G (256GB / 8GB RAM) but not available on Doogee Note 59 Pro.
  • HDR10+ support is present on Samsung Galaxy A56 5G (256GB / 8GB RAM) but not available on Doogee Note 59 Pro.
  • Always-On Display is present on Samsung Galaxy A56 5G (256GB / 8GB RAM) but not available on Doogee Note 59 Pro.
  • The chipset is Unisoc T8200 on Doogee Note 59 Pro and Samsung Exynos 1580 on Samsung Galaxy A56 5G (256GB / 8GB RAM).
  • The GPU is Mali G57 MC2 on Doogee Note 59 Pro and Xclipse 530 on Samsung Galaxy A56 5G (256GB / 8GB RAM).
  • CPU speed is 2 x 2.3 & 6 x 2.1 GHz on Doogee Note 59 Pro and 1 x 2.9 & 3 x 2.6 & 4 x 1.95 GHz on Samsung Galaxy A56 5G (256GB / 8GB RAM).
  • GPU clock speed is 850 MHz on Doogee Note 59 Pro and 1300 MHz on Samsung Galaxy A56 5G (256GB / 8GB RAM).
  • RAM speed is 2133 MHz on Doogee Note 59 Pro and 3200 MHz on Samsung Galaxy A56 5G (256GB / 8GB RAM).
  • Semiconductor size is 6 nm on Doogee Note 59 Pro and 4 nm on Samsung Galaxy A56 5G (256GB / 8GB RAM).
  • Maximum memory amount is 10GB on Doogee Note 59 Pro and 12GB on Samsung Galaxy A56 5G (256GB / 8GB RAM).
  • DDR memory version is DDR4 on Doogee Note 59 Pro and DDR5 on Samsung Galaxy A56 5G (256GB / 8GB RAM).
  • The main camera is a single lens on Doogee Note 59 Pro, while Samsung Galaxy A56 5G (256GB / 8GB RAM) has a multi-lens setup with 50 MP, 12 MP, and 5 MP sensors.
  • Main camera apertures are f/1.8 on Doogee Note 59 Pro and f/1.8, f/2.2, and f/2.4 on Samsung Galaxy A56 5G (256GB / 8GB RAM).
  • Front camera resolution is 8 MP on Doogee Note 59 Pro and 12 MP on Samsung Galaxy A56 5G (256GB / 8GB RAM).
  • Optical image stabilization is present on Samsung Galaxy A56 5G (256GB / 8GB RAM) but not available on Doogee Note 59 Pro.
  • Main camera video recording is 1080p at 30 fps on Doogee Note 59 Pro and 2160p at 30 fps on Samsung Galaxy A56 5G (256GB / 8GB RAM).
  • Battery capacity is 6250 mAh on Doogee Note 59 Pro and 5000 mAh on Samsung Galaxy A56 5G (256GB / 8GB RAM).
  • Charging speed is 18W on Doogee Note 59 Pro and 45W on Samsung Galaxy A56 5G (256GB / 8GB RAM).
  • A charger is included in the box with Doogee Note 59 Pro but not with Samsung Galaxy A56 5G (256GB / 8GB RAM).
  • A 3.5 mm audio jack is present on Doogee Note 59 Pro but not available on Samsung Galaxy A56 5G (256GB / 8GB RAM).
  • Stereo speakers are present on Samsung Galaxy A56 5G (256GB / 8GB RAM) but not available on Doogee Note 59 Pro.
  • Wi-Fi 6 (802.11ax) support is present on Samsung Galaxy A56 5G (256GB / 8GB RAM) but not available on Doogee Note 59 Pro.
  • Samsung Galaxy A56 5G (256GB / 8GB RAM) supports 2 eSIMs in addition to 2 physical SIM cards, while Doogee Note 59 Pro supports only 2 physical SIM cards.
  • Bluetooth version is 5.0 on Doogee Note 59 Pro and 5.3 on Samsung Galaxy A56 5G (256GB / 8GB RAM).
  • An external memory slot is present on Doogee Note 59 Pro but not available on Samsung Galaxy A56 5G (256GB / 8GB RAM).
Specs Comparison
Doogee Note 59 Pro

Doogee Note 59 Pro

Samsung Galaxy A56 5G (256GB / 8GB RAM)

Samsung Galaxy A56 5G (256GB / 8GB RAM)

Design:
water resistance None Waterproof
weight 199 g 198 g
thickness 8.6 mm 7.4 mm
width 77.5 mm 77.5 mm
height 168 mm 162.2 mm
volume 111.972 cm³ 93.0217 cm³
has a rugged build
can be folded

In terms of physical footprint, these two phones are remarkably close: both share an identical 77.5 mm width and are within a gram of each other in weight (199 g vs 198 g), meaning neither will feel meaningfully lighter or more one-handed in daily use. Where they diverge is height and thickness — the Doogee Note 59 Pro is 5.8 mm taller and 1.2 mm thicker at 8.6 mm versus the Galaxy A56's slimmer 7.4 mm profile. That gap translates to a noticeably bulkier feel in-pocket and in-hand, and it also drives a significant difference in overall volume: 111.97 cm³ for the Doogee versus 93.02 cm³ for the Samsung — roughly 20% more displaced space.

The most consequential differentiator in this group is water resistance. The Galaxy A56 5G carries a waterproof rating, meaning it can withstand exposure to water — rain, splashes, or accidental submersion — without damage. The Doogee Note 59 Pro lists no water resistance whatsoever, which is a genuine real-world liability for anyone who uses their phone outdoors, near water, or in unpredictable environments. This is not a minor spec gap; it affects the phone's durability in everyday scenarios.

Neither device has a rugged build or foldable form factor, so those axes are a wash. Overall, the Samsung Galaxy A56 5G holds a clear design advantage: it is thinner, more compact by volume, and critically, waterproof — making it the more refined and practical choice from a physical design standpoint.

Display:
Display type LCD, IPS OLED/AMOLED
screen size 6.75" 6.7"
pixel density 260 ppi 385 ppi
resolution 720 x 1600 px 1080 x 2340 px
refresh rate 120Hz 120Hz
has branded damage-resistant glass
supports HDR10
supports HDR10+
Always-On Display
supports Dolby Vision
Has a secondary screen
has a touch screen

The panel technology gap here is substantial. The Doogee Note 59 Pro uses an LCD IPS display, while the Galaxy A56 5G deploys an OLED/AMOLED panel — a fundamental difference that cascades across virtually every visual quality metric. AMOLED screens produce true blacks by switching off individual pixels, deliver higher contrast ratios, and render more vivid, saturated colors compared to LCD, which relies on a backlight that bleeds through even dark content. For everyday use — scrolling social media, watching video, or simply reading at night — the Samsung's screen will look visibly more premium.

The resolution and sharpness divide reinforces this gap. The Galaxy A56 outputs at 1080 x 2340 px with a pixel density of 385 ppi, versus the Doogee's 720 x 1600 px at just 260 ppi. That 48% density advantage means text edges are crisper and fine image detail is meaningfully more defined on the Samsung — a difference most users can perceive with the naked eye at normal viewing distances. Both phones match on 120Hz refresh rate, so scrolling smoothness is a genuine tie.

The Samsung also pulls ahead on ancillary display features: it supports HDR10 and HDR10+ for expanded dynamic range in compatible video content, includes an Always-On Display for at-a-glance notifications, and uses branded damage-resistant glass — none of which the Doogee offers. The Galaxy A56 5G holds an overwhelming advantage in this category across panel quality, resolution, and feature depth.

Performance:
internal storage 256GB 256GB
RAM 8GB 8GB
Chipset (SoC) name Unisoc T8200 Samsung Exynos 1580
GPU name Mali G57 MC2 Xclipse 530
CPU speed 2 x 2.3 & 6 x 2.1 GHz 1 x 2.9 & 3 x 2.6 & 4 x 1.95 GHz
GPU clock speed 850 MHz 1300 MHz
Has integrated LTE
RAM speed 2133 MHz 3200 MHz
semiconductor size 6 nm 4 nm
Supports 64-bit
Has integrated graphics
Uses big.LITTLE technology
maximum memory amount 10GB 12GB
DDR memory version 4 5

At the silicon level, the Galaxy A56 5G has a meaningful structural advantage. Its Exynos 1580 is built on a 4 nm process, compared to the Doogee Note 59 Pro's Unisoc T8200 on 6 nm. A smaller fabrication node generally means more transistors per mm², translating to better power efficiency and more headroom for sustained performance under load. The Exynos 1580 also uses a three-tier CPU cluster — a prime core at 2.9 GHz, three performance cores at 2.6 GHz, and four efficiency cores at 1.95 GHz — a more nuanced configuration than the Unisoc's two-tier layout, giving the Samsung finer control over balancing speed against battery draw in real-world workloads.

The GPU and memory story follows the same trajectory. The Galaxy A56's Xclipse 530 runs at 1300 MHz versus the Mali G57 MC2's 850 MHz — a 53% clock speed advantage that will manifest in smoother frame rates in graphically demanding games and faster image processing. On the memory side, the Samsung uses DDR5 RAM at 3200 MHz, while the Doogee relies on DDR4 at 2133 MHz. DDR5 offers higher bandwidth and lower latency, which benefits multitasking, app switching, and any memory-intensive task. The Samsung also supports up to 12 GB maximum memory versus 10 GB on the Doogee.

Both devices ship with identical 256 GB storage and 8 GB of base RAM, so out-of-the-box configurations are matched on paper. But across every architectural dimension — process node, CPU configuration, GPU clock speed, and memory generation — the Galaxy A56 5G holds a clear and consistent performance advantage.

Cameras:
megapixels (main camera) 50 MP 50 & 12 & 5 MP
wide aperture (main camera) 1.8f 1.8 & 2.2 & 2.4f
Has a dual-lens (or multi-lens) main camera
megapixels (front camera) 8MP 12MP
has built-in optical image stabilization
video recording (main camera) 1080 x 30 fps 2160 x 30 fps
Has a dual-tone LED flash
number of flash LEDs 1 1
has a BSI sensor
has a CMOS sensor
has continuous autofocus when recording movies
Has phase-detection autofocus for photos
supports slow-motion video recording
has a built-in HDR mode
has manual exposure
has a flash
optical zoom 0x 0x
has manual ISO
has a serial shot mode
has manual focus
has a front camera
Has laser autofocus
Shoots 360° panorama
has manual white balance
shoots raw
has touch autofocus
has manual shutter speed
can create panoramas in-camera
wide aperture (front camera) 2.2f 2.2f
Has timelapse function
Has a front-facing LED flash
has a dual-lens (or multi-lens) front camera
supports HDR10 recording
supports Dolby Vision recording
has a front-facing camera under the display
Has a RGB LED flash
has 3D photo/video recording capabilities

The most structurally significant difference is that the Galaxy A56 5G fields a triple rear camera system — 50 MP main, 12 MP ultrawide, and 5 MP depth — while the Doogee Note 59 Pro offers a single rear lens at 50 MP. In practical terms, the Samsung gives users compositional flexibility the Doogee simply cannot match: an ultrawide lens opens up landscape and architectural shots, and the depth sensor aids subject separation in portrait mode. Both share an identical f/1.8 main aperture, so low-light intake on the primary lens is theoretically on equal footing.

Two other differentiators carry real-world weight. The Galaxy A56 includes optical image stabilization (OIS), which physically compensates for hand movement during capture — noticeably reducing blur in low-light stills and smoothing handheld video. The Doogee offers no OIS. Compounding this, the Samsung records video at 4K (2160p) at 30 fps, while the Doogee tops out at 1080p at 30 fps — a full resolution tier behind. For anyone who values video quality, that gap is hard to overlook. On the front, the Samsung's 12 MP selfie camera doubles the Doogee's 8 MP, though both share the same f/2.2 aperture.

The manual controls, autofocus modes, and shooting features available to both phones are nearly identical — panorama, continuous autofocus, phase-detection, HDR mode, timelapse, and slow-motion are all present on each. But the hardware advantages tell a clear story: the Galaxy A56 5G wins this category on versatility (multi-lens system), stabilization (OIS), and video resolution (4K), making it the stronger camera package by a significant margin.

Operating system:
Android version Android 15 Android 15
has clipboard warnings
has location privacy options
has camera/microphone privacy options
has Mail Privacy Protection
has theme customization
can block app tracking
blocks cross-site tracking
has on-device machine learning
has notification permissions
has media picker
Can play games while they download
has dark mode
has Wi-Fi password sharing
has battery health check
has an extra dim mode
has focus modes
has dynamic theming
can offload apps
Has customizable notifications
has Live Text
has full-page screenshots
supports split screen
gets direct OS updates
has PiP
Can be used as a PC
Has sharing intents
has a child lock
Supports widgets
Is free and open source
Has offline voice recognition
has voice commands
Tracks the current position of a mobile device
is a multi-user system
has Quick Start

This is a rare category where the two phones are in complete lockstep. Both run Android 15 and share an identical feature set across every single spec provided — privacy controls, dark mode, dynamic theming, split-screen, Picture-in-Picture, widgets, offline voice recognition, on-device machine learning, and more are all present on each device. There is not a single differentiating data point in this group.

The one item worth flagging for both equally is that neither device gets direct OS updates — meaning neither is guaranteed prompt, manufacturer-independent Android version upgrades. This is a shared limitation rather than a differentiator, but it is worth noting for users who prioritize long-term software support.

Based strictly on the provided specs, this category is a complete tie. A buyer cannot use operating system features to distinguish between these two phones — the decision will have to rest on the hardware differences covered in other groups.

Battery:
battery power 6250 mAh 5000 mAh
has wireless charging
Supports fast charging
charging speed 18W 45W
comes with a charger
has a removable battery
has a battery level indicator
has a rechargeable battery

Battery capacity and charging speed pull in opposite directions here, making this a genuine trade-off rather than a clean win for either side. The Doogee Note 59 Pro packs a 6250 mAh cell — 25% larger than the Galaxy A56 5G's 5000 mAh. All else being equal, a bigger reservoir means more hours between charges, which is a tangible daily-use advantage for heavy users or those who are frequently away from a power source.

Flip to charging speed, however, and the Samsung reclaims ground decisively. At 45W, the Galaxy A56 charges at 2.5 times the rate of the Doogee's 18W. In practice, the Samsung can go from near-empty to a meaningful charge in a short break, while the Doogee will demand significantly longer plugged-in time to reach the same level. A notable wrinkle: the Galaxy A56 does not include a charger in the box, while the Doogee does — a small but real out-of-box convenience difference that buyers should factor into the total cost. Neither phone supports wireless charging.

Which advantage matters more depends entirely on usage pattern. For users who prefer to charge less frequently and don't mind slower top-ups, the Doogee Note 59 Pro's 6250 mAh capacity is the more compelling spec. For those who charge opportunistically and value speed over raw endurance, the Galaxy A56's 45W fast charging is the stronger asset. This group is a contextual tie — no single winner fits every user.

Audio:
has a socket for a 3.5 mm audio jack
has stereo speakers
has LDAC
has aptX Lossless
Has a radio

Audio comes down to a single trade-off: the Doogee Note 59 Pro keeps the 3.5 mm headphone jack while the Galaxy A56 5G drops it in favor of stereo speakers. These are genuinely different priorities. A headphone jack means plug-and-play compatibility with any wired headphones or earbuds — no dongle, no pairing, no battery to worry about. It is a meaningful convenience for users who prefer wired audio or frequently use headphones on the go.

Stereo speakers, on the other hand, benefit media consumption without headphones — watching videos, listening to music aloud, or taking calls on speakerphone all sound noticeably more spacious and immersive with two drivers firing from different positions on the device, compared to the mono output the Doogee delivers. For shared listening or desk use, the Samsung's stereo speaker setup is a clear step up. Neither device supports LDAC or aptX Lossless, so high-resolution wireless audio codec support is off the table for both.

This group is a user-preference draw with no objectively superior choice — it hinges on how you listen. Wired headphone users will value the Doogee Note 59 Pro's 3.5 mm jack; those who prioritize loudspeaker quality for media and calls will find the Galaxy A56 5G's stereo speakers more useful day-to-day.

Connectivity & Features:
release date March 2025 March 2025
has 5G support
Wi-Fi version Wi-Fi 4 (802.11n), Wi-Fi 5 (802.11ac) Wi-Fi 4 (802.11n), Wi-Fi 5 (802.11ac), Wi-Fi 6 (802.11ax)
SIM cards 2 SIM 2 SIM, 2 eSIM
Bluetooth version 5 5.3
has an external memory slot
Has USB Type-C
USB version 2 2
has NFC
Has a fingerprint scanner
has emergency SOS via satellite
has crash detection
is DLNA-certified
has a gyroscope
supports ANT+
Has a heart rate monitor
has GPS
has a compass
supports Wi-Fi
Has an infrared sensor
has an accelerometer
has a cellular module
Has a barometer
has an HDMI output
Uses 3D facial recognition
Has an iris scanner
Stylus included
supports Galileo
Has motion tracking
Has optical tracking
Has a built-in projector

Wireless connectivity is where the Samsung Galaxy A56 5G pulls noticeably ahead. It supports Wi-Fi 6 (802.11ax) in addition to Wi-Fi 4 and 5, while the Doogee Note 59 Pro tops out at Wi-Fi 5. Wi-Fi 6 delivers higher throughput, lower latency, and better performance in congested environments — such as busy households or public spaces with many connected devices. Similarly, the Samsung's Bluetooth 5.3 is a step up from the Doogee's Bluetooth 5.0, offering incremental improvements in connection stability and energy efficiency that benefit wireless audio and peripheral pairing over time.

SIM flexibility is another meaningful gap. The Galaxy A56 supports 2 physical SIMs plus 2 eSIMs, giving users considerable flexibility for managing multiple lines or switching carriers without swapping physical cards — useful for frequent travelers or dual-line users. The Doogee Note 59 Pro supports 2 physical SIMs only, with no eSIM capability. In exchange, the Doogee offers something the Samsung does not: an external memory card slot, allowing expandable storage — a practical advantage for users who need more space without paying for a higher-capacity model.

The remaining connectivity features — 5G, NFC, USB Type-C (USB 2.0), GPS, Galileo, fingerprint scanner, gyroscope, and accelerometer — are identical on both devices. Weighing the differences, the Galaxy A56 5G holds the broader connectivity edge through Wi-Fi 6, newer Bluetooth, and eSIM support, though users who prioritize expandable storage will find the Doogee's memory card slot a worthwhile counterpoint.

Miscellaneous:
has a video light
Has sapphire glass display
Has a curved display
Has an e-paper display

The miscellaneous spec group for these two devices contains no differentiators whatsoever. Both phones share a video light, and neither features sapphire glass, a curved display, or an e-paper display. This is a complete tie — no purchasing decision can be made on the basis of this category alone.

Comparison Summary & Verdict

After examining every spec, a clear picture emerges of two phones built for different audiences. The Doogee Note 59 Pro stands out with its massive 6250 mAh battery, a 3.5 mm headphone jack, an expandable memory slot, and a bundled charger, making it a compelling option for users who value endurance and versatility without hunting for accessories. The Samsung Galaxy A56 5G, on the other hand, excels in almost every quality-focused dimension: its OLED display with HDR10+ and 385 ppi, triple-lens camera with optical image stabilization and 4K video recording, faster 45W charging, stereo speakers, Wi-Fi 6, Bluetooth 5.3, eSIM support, and a more powerful Exynos 1580 chipset all point to a premium everyday experience. Choose the Doogee if long battery life and audio jack compatibility are non-negotiable; choose the Samsung if you want a sharper, more capable all-rounder with superior multimedia and connectivity features.

Doogee Note 59 Pro
Buy Doogee Note 59 Pro if...

Buy the Doogee Note 59 Pro if you prioritize a larger battery for extended use, need a 3.5 mm headphone jack, want expandable storage, and prefer a charger included in the box.

Samsung Galaxy A56 5G (256GB / 8GB RAM)
Buy Samsung Galaxy A56 5G (256GB / 8GB RAM) if...

Buy the Samsung Galaxy A56 5G (256GB / 8GB RAM) if you want a sharper OLED display, a versatile multi-lens camera with 4K video and optical image stabilization, faster 45W charging, stereo speakers, and broader connectivity with Wi-Fi 6 and eSIM support.