I think nobody actually knows.
Google will tell you it's Corning Gorilla Glass 3, e.g. this Android Authority review. But I suspect it was a rumor or pre-release leak that caught on.
CNET says it's gg5. But if you actually go to the official sources... zilch. Nothing at Samsung about the screen's glass, Corning or not; and Corning's official list doesn't even list the S20 FE!
I'd be happy to hear credible info, but I see no evidence whether the S20 FE uses gg5, gg3, gg at all, or non-Corning glass.
At first I was horrified that such a high-end new phone (may) use the same glass as the 2014 Galaxy S5. But the more I read about phone glass, the more unsure I am if it even matters. Those who are knowledgable point out that there's nothing so special about Corning's process, that glass is glass, that gg3 might've been better than gg5, that one trades off scratch resistance for shatter resistance, that flatter screens are more durable anyway, etc. etc...
Google will tell you it's Corning Gorilla Glass 3, e.g. this Android Authority review. But I suspect it was a rumor or pre-release leak that caught on.
CNET says it's gg5. But if you actually go to the official sources... zilch. Nothing at Samsung about the screen's glass, Corning or not; and Corning's official list doesn't even list the S20 FE!
I'd be happy to hear credible info, but I see no evidence whether the S20 FE uses gg5, gg3, gg at all, or non-Corning glass.
At first I was horrified that such a high-end new phone (may) use the same glass as the 2014 Galaxy S5. But the more I read about phone glass, the more unsure I am if it even matters. Those who are knowledgable point out that there's nothing so special about Corning's process, that glass is glass, that gg3 might've been better than gg5, that one trades off scratch resistance for shatter resistance, that flatter screens are more durable anyway, etc. etc...