1. The device's general "slowness". It is uncomfortable to read news websites with a lot of adverts, like RBC or a jellyfish with little ads. It scrolls the content jerkily. The response when pressing "back" is frequently delayed, causing you to click again and, as a result, land on the opposite page from the one you intended to visit. Obviously, this is possible on any device, but with the A32, the absence of slowness is more or less an anomaly.
2. The fingerprint sensor may have been mentioned in the opening sentence. He lacks radiance and sparkle. Additionally, the finger must strictly touch at a correct angle in order for recognition to be successful. Samsung decided that three prints would be sufficient and set the proper cap for whatever reason. There is generally a negative.
3. A camera. I didn't expect anything exceptionally inventive—but neither was it very disgusting—when I spent $17,000 on a device. Only under ideal circumstances may outcomes be considered more or less normal.
4. Screen capture. She's not there. Along with point 2, I believe a dishonest engineer created this smartphone.
5. The "dialer" is very irritating. Brakes. Okay, it's a cheap model, but the dialer is a fundamental feature! Over the years, it should have been debugged, but wasn't.
Even additional evidence points to the engineer's harmfulness: in order to call a contact, you must do confusing extra movements that, in some circumstances, are quite uncomfortable to make: you must search for a contact in the dialer. Found. It makes sense that pressing the button should make a call, yet it doesn't. The "What Do You Want?" menu. Write, send messages, make phone calls, video calls, or browse contact details? I'm on the line; why are there more options?