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iOS 27 Beta Code Points to Apple's Foldable iPhone Ultra

iOS 27 developer betas hide strings — 'foldState,' 'angleDegrees' — that confirm Apple is building a foldable iPhone Ultra for fall 2026.

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Argal
Argal
2 min read
iOS 27 Beta Code Points to Apple's Foldable iPhone Ultra

Every year Apple ships a developer beta that contains far more than just bug fixes. This year's iOS 27 beta, released at WWDC 2026 in early June, quietly carries what analysts are calling the most convincing evidence yet that a foldable iPhone is real and coming soon.

Developer Sam Henri Gold discovered multiple framework references in the iOS 27 codebase that simply did not exist in iOS 26. The standout strings: foldState, angleDegrees, and mechanicalAngleDegrees, plus a function built to count the number of built-in displays attached to a device. Taken together, they describe the exact software infrastructure needed to support a phone that folds — detecting whether it's open or closed, reading the hinge angle in real time, and managing content across two integrated screens.

The inclusion of a free-stop hinge angle reader is particularly telling. It suggests the rumored device won't simply snap between open and closed states, but will behave more like Samsung's Galaxy Z Fold line, where the phone can rest at any angle — enabling hands-free video calls, laptop-style browsing, and other flex-mode experiences.

For years, foldable iPhone rumors circulated as little more than supply-chain whispers and leaked CAD renders. These iOS 27 code references are different: they're functional API hooks that Apple's own engineers wrote into the operating system ahead of hardware that doesn't officially exist yet. That's not a coincidence.

The expected device — widely referred to as the iPhone Ultra — is reported to carry a book-style design with a larger inner display and a smaller outer cover screen, premium materials, a redesigned hinge, and a starting price that could exceed $2,000. A fall 2026 debut alongside the iPhone 18 Pro lineup is the prevailing expectation among industry watchers.

Apple has not confirmed anything. But the company has a long history of quietly preparing its software well before hardware ships. The foldable iPhone's software foundation is, by all appearances, already in place.

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Argal

Argal

@argal

Clurky is a Philippine tech news site owned and run by Argal, a Philippines-born software developer based in Singapore with a Computer Science background. He covers Philippine tech, fintech, and digital services - from gadgets and AI to software and security - along with evergreen guides and explainers, all with a builder's eye for how these systems actually work. Every article is fact-checked against primary sources.

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