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Samsung Galaxy Book3 360 – Full Review 2025

Samsung Galaxy Book3 360 2-in-1 convertible laptop

Is it worth it?

If you’ve been juggling a thin work laptop, a separate tablet for diagrams, and a fistful of dongles, the Galaxy Book3 360 finally stops the faff. This 13.3-inch AMOLED 2‑in‑1 flips into tablet mode, ships with an S Pen in the box, and packs proper ports (including Thunderbolt 4 and HDMI) so you can present, sketch, and get through real work without hunting for adapters. It’s built for commuters, students, and creatives who want colour-accurate visuals and a responsive pen without lugging a brick. The hook? Despite the compact frame, it’s surprisingly capable—enough that I edited photos, ran dozens of Chrome tabs, and hopped on video calls with AI noise cancelling, all on the same train ride.

After living with the Galaxy Book3 360 as my daily machine, my verdict is clear: it’s a superb mobile companion if you value OLED visuals, pen input, and a featherweight build, and you’re happy to trade raw horsepower and a huge screen for portability. If you need a workstation for 4K video renders or AAA gaming, this isn’t it; but for office work, sketching, meetings, and travel, it’s delightfully fast and fuss-free. Here’s the twist—if you think you’ll never use the pen, give it a week: annotating PDFs, signing docs, and marking screenshots becomes oddly addictive, and it’s where this 2‑in‑1 quietly earns its keep.

Specifications

BrandSamsung
ModelGalaxy Book3 360
Display13.3-inch FHD Super AMOLED touch (1920×1080)
Processor13th Gen Intel Core i7
Memory16 GB LPDDR4x
Storage512 GB SSD
GraphicsIntel Iris Xe
PortsHDMI, USB‑A x2, Thunderbolt 4, microSD.
User Score 4.2 ⭐ (200 reviews)
Price approx. 750£ Check 🛒

Key Features

Samsung Galaxy Book3 360 2-in-1 convertible laptop

FHD AMOLED touch display

The panel is a 13.3-inch Super AMOLED at 1920×1080, which means deep blacks, punchy colours, and fast response for scrolling and inking. It’s also easier on the eyes than typical LCDs thanks to lower blue-light emission, which helps on long days. In practice, spreadsheets look crisp at 125% scaling, films pop with HDR‑like depth, and the screen stays readable on bright trains when set around 70% brightness.

S Pen included

Samsung bundles a battery-free S Pen with low latency, so writing feels immediate and controlled rather than floaty. Palm rejection is excellent, and line weight responds naturally to pressure. I used it to mark up contracts in Adobe Acrobat and scribble maths in OneNote; switching to tablet mode for five-minute sketches between meetings became second nature.

13th Gen Intel Core performance

A hybrid Core i7 handles everyday workloads with headroom to spare, mixing performance cores for bursts and efficiency cores for quiet cruising. Office apps, 20+ Chrome tabs, Spotify, and a light Lightroom batch didn’t make it sweat. Rendering a 5‑minute 1080p clip in Clipchamp took a few minutes—respectable for a thin-and-light, though not a workstation replacement.

Ports and Thunderbolt 4

You get HDMI for easy meeting-room hookups, two USB‑A for legacy gear, a microSD slot for creators, and TB4 for 40 Gbps transfers and fast docks. The real win is no-dongle anxiety: I plugged into a projector, card reader, and SSD all week without rummaging in my bag. A single TB4 cable to my desk hub powered dual 4K monitors and charged the laptop in one go.

Studio Mode for calls

The 1080p webcam pairs with dual array mics and smart software—AI noise cancelling, auto-framing, and background effects—for cleaner calls. It won’t replace a dedicated camera, but it’s a noticeable step up from the murky 720p laptops of old. Colleagues heard less typing noise, and auto-framing kept me centred when presenting from a cramped kitchen table.

Firsthand Experience

Unboxing feels premium but minimal: a slim graphite aluminium chassis, a compact USB‑C charger, and a full-size S Pen included—no paywall for the stylus, which is rare. The hinge swings smoothly into tent or tablet mode with zero wobble on a desk. At 13.3 inches, it slips easily into a satchel, and the edges are rounded enough not to snag. The first boot was under 10 minutes from lid open to desktop, and Windows Hello had me signed in by the second try. Samsung’s setup nudges you to link your Galaxy phone; I obliged, and the cross-device bits worked straight away without hunting through menus.

Pros and Cons

✔ Superb FHD AMOLED display with true blacks and lower eye strain
✔ Lightweight 2‑in‑1 with a firm hinge and S Pen included
✔ Strong day-to-day performance from 13th Gen Core i7 and fast SSD
✔ Useful port selection (HDMI, USB‑A, TB4, microSD) reduces dongle reliance.
✖ No Microsoft Office licence bundled, adding extra cost
✖ Can run warm on the underside during sustained loads
✖ Battery life is good but not class-leading for OLED
✖ 13.3-inch screen may feel cramped for heavy multitasking.

Customer Reviews

Early user sentiment is encouraging: most buyers highlight the OLED screen, quick setup, solid performance, and the handy S Pen, with a few calling out the value at current discounts. There are some grumbles around software (no bundled Office), heat under load, and occasional logistics hiccups, but overall the tone suggests a confident, well-liked 2‑in‑1 that has hit the ground running.

Sja designs (5⭐)
The metallic build and bright screen impressed me, and setup was effortless
. teja (4⭐)
Great value at the sale price and the touchscreen is smooth, but I wish MS Office was included out of the box
. Vernal Scott (5⭐)
A joy to type on with strong sound and a gorgeous display—does get warm underneath during long sessions but still excellent
. Amy C S (3⭐)
Sleek and travel-friendly, yet I hit annoying quirks after updates and it can feel slow on big projects, plus the charger feels flimsy
. L C. (1⭐)
Hardware is spot on for my needs, but delivery delays were unacceptable on my order, so buy only if you can wait or pick another retailer.

Comparison

Against the Lenovo Yoga 7i 14, the Galaxy Book3 360 trades Yoga’s larger 14-inch 2.2K panel for a smaller but deeper-contrast AMOLED at FHD. In hand, Samsung’s unit feels a touch lighter and more tablet-like with the bundled pen, while the Yoga often squeaks ahead on battery in mixed office use due to its slightly larger cell and higher-efficiency LCD. If your workflow leans on inking and media, Samsung’s colour and blacks win; if you value a bigger canvas and a whisper more stamina, the Yoga is compelling. Up against the HP Spectre x360 14, the Spectre typically offers a higher-resolution OLED and a jewel-like chassis with an excellent keyboard. However, Samsung fires back with more seamless phone integration (via Galaxy/Windows Link) and includes the pen at no extra cost, whereas HP bundles vary. Performance is comparable with similar chips; the choice often comes down to whether you prefer HP’s near-quad‑HD sharpness or Samsung’s lighter feel and better value at current UK discounts. Versus Microsoft’s Surface Pro 9, you’re choosing form factor more than specs. The Surface is a tablet-first device that needs a keyboard cover (and pen) purchase to complete the setup, which can push total price higher. The Samsung gives you a traditional laptop experience with a sturdier lap feel, the pen in the box, and proper ports—including HDMI—so it’s more meeting-room friendly without a dock. For pure drawing comfort on the sofa, Surface still has the edge; for balanced laptop use with occasional inking, the Book3 360 is the simpler pick. In raw value terms at its current mid-to-high price band, the Galaxy Book3 360 stands out when the sale price drops well below four figures. At full RRP, rivals with higher-resolution OLEDs compete strongly; at the common UK discount level, Samsung’s combination of AMOLED, pen, and ports is hard to beat.

Frequently Asked Questions

Does it come with Microsoft Office preinstalled and licensed?
It ships with Windows 11 and standard Microsoft apps, but no paid Office licence—use the free web apps, buy Microsoft 365, or install alternatives like LibreOffice.
Can I upgrade the RAM or storage later?
The RAM is soldered and not user-upgradeable
How many external displays can I run?
Via Thunderbolt 4 and HDMI you can drive multiple monitors
Does the S Pen attach or charge?
The S Pen is passive (no charging needed). It magnetically attaches to the chassis for quick storage, and replacement tips are inexpensive if you wear one down.

Conclusion

The Galaxy Book3 360 nails the brief for a portable, premium 2‑in‑1: a colour-rich AMOLED, a responsive bundled S Pen, and the rare luxury of real ports in a sub‑14‑inch chassis. Day-to-day speed is snappy, calls look and sound better than many thin-and-lights, and Samsung’s phone integration adds genuine convenience. The flipside is familiar for this class: heat under sustained load, good-but-not-spectacular battery life, and a 13.3-inch canvas that may feel tight if you love split-screening three apps. You shouldn’t buy it if you need a workstation (think 32 GB RAM, dedicated GPU, or a 15–16-inch 2.8K/3K display) or if you’re allergic to buying an Office licence. You should buy it if you want an elegant travel laptop that doubles as a tablet, if you annotate documents or sketch regularly, and if you value proper ports and an OLED screen you can stare at all day without fatigue. In the UK it sits in the mid-to-high price bracket, but frequent discounts bring it into very strong value territory—at sale prices, it’s an easy recommendation. Check the links for current deals; when it dips, it’s one of the most balanced OLED 2‑in‑1s you can buy.

Photography of Alexandre Lefèvre

Alexandre Lefèvre

I’m a tech enthusiast passionate about testing and reviewing the latest tech devices. I share honest insights to help you choose the right products with confidence.