
A new hands-on look at Apple’s rumored foldable iPhone is making the rounds after YouTube channel Unbox Therapy shared a video on May 5 showing a physical dummy unit from multiple angles. The mockup is being described as Apple’s first foldable phone, and current expectations are that the product could eventually launch as the iPhone Ultra.
Based on the video, the device opens to a size that comes in slightly smaller than an iPad mini, though it still keeps a tablet-like screen ratio when unfolded. That gives it a layout that looks more productivity-oriented than a standard book-style foldable that simply stretches a phone display wider.

On the hardware side, the report says Apple is expected to use its A20 Pro chip built on a 2nm process, paired with 12GB of memory. While those specs remain part of the rumor chain for now, they line up with the idea that an Apple foldable phone would be positioned as a premium flagship rather than an experimental side product.
One of the more interesting details involves the hinge. Foldable phones are still judged heavily on how visible the crease is, and this model is rumored to use a liquid metal hinge design to reduce crease visibility. If that part proves accurate, it would show Apple focusing on one of the biggest complaints people still have about foldable hardware.
The video also provides a few measurements for the dummy unit. When folded, the reported width is 84.27 mm. The thinnest part of the body is said to be 11.01 mm, while overall thickness rises to 16.57 mm once the rear camera bump is included. Those numbers suggest a device that may prioritize internal space and structural rigidity over chasing the thinnest profile possible.
At this stage, nothing here confirms final retail specifications, and dummy units often reflect industrial design direction more than finalized internals. Even so, the latest footage gives a clearer sense of how Apple may be approaching its first foldable product, especially in terms of proportions, hinge strategy, and flagship positioning.
