Samsung’s Galaxy S26 Ultra has spent the months since its February launch in the hands of regional power users across Southeast Asia and Oceania, and three impressions keep appearing in their notes: proactive Galaxy AI, low-light Nightography, and a built-in Privacy Display no competitor yet matches. The flagship launched alongside the Galaxy S26 and Galaxy S26+ at Samsung Unpacked in San Francisco on February 25, 2026, with global sales rolling out from March 11.
Samsung pulled the regional reviews together in a Newsroom roundup that gathered notes from Gadget Guy in Australia, Amanz in Malaysia, Tekno.kompas.com in Indonesia, Revu in the Philippines, Geek Culture in Singapore, and Vatvo Studio in Vietnam. The outlets span six markets and five languages, and the same three things kept surfacing after weeks of daily use.
The Third Generation of Samsung’s AI Phones
Samsung unveiled the Galaxy S26, Galaxy S26+ and Galaxy S26 Ultra on February 25, 2026, at Unpacked in San Francisco. The series is positioned as Samsung’s third-generation AI phones, a label the company has used to distinguish the lineup from earlier Galaxy flagships that did not put on-device AI at the front of the buying decision. The Ultra is the model the regional reviews keep circling back to.
TM Roh, Chief Executive Officer and Head of the Device eXperience Division at Samsung Electronics, framed the lineup around AI that fades into the background. “We believe AI should be something people can depend on every day, designed to work consistently for everyone and without the need for expertise,” Roh said in Samsung’s official Galaxy S26 series announcement. The pitch is consistent across the lineup, but it lands hardest on the Ultra, where Samsung has concentrated the new hardware.
The Ultra is the slimmest in the S Ultra line at 7.9mm thin and weighs 214 grams, 0.3mm thinner than the S25 Ultra, according to the Galaxy S26 series first look at Unpacked 2026. The series ships in Cobalt Violet, Black, Sky Blue and White. Global sales began on March 11, 2026, in South Korea before expanding to more than 120 countries through April, as covered in the Galaxy S26 lineup going on sale worldwide.
Galaxy AI in the Daily Routine
Galaxy AI is the centerpiece of the S26 series, and it is built around a small set of proactive features that surface information before the user reaches for an app. Now Nudge suggests photos from the Gallery when a friend asks about a recent trip, and recognizes calendar entries inside messages to flag scheduling conflicts. Now Brief delivers a daily summary by time of day, with weather, agenda, health and sleep data organized into morning, afternoon, evening and late-night blocks.
Adam Turner of Gadget Guy in Australia called Now Nudge one of the most useful pieces of the puzzle. “Galaxy AI tries to make life easier in all kinds of little ways. Now Nudge surfaces useful information when you’re using messaging apps,” Turner wrote. The behavior mirrors what Google calls Magic Cue on its Pixel line, and Samsung’s version is built into the keyboard layer so it works inside any app that runs Samsung’s input method.
Effi of Amanz in Malaysia praised Now Brief as a local-first way to start and end the day. “Now Brief feature provides a daily summary for morning, afternoon, evening and late night including a daily agenda, weather forecast, health summary and sleep pattern. For those who want to see their daily summary locally, this is a useful feature before starting or ending the day,” Effi wrote. The widget pulls from Samsung Calendar, Gmail, Samsung Wallet and SmartThings notifications, with controls in Settings to opt specific sources in or out.
- Now Nudge: surfaces photos from Gallery and detects calendar conflicts from incoming messages.
- Now Brief: daily summary by time of day, with weather, agenda, health and sleep data.
- Circle to Search with Google: multi-object recognition for exploring multiple parts of an image at once.
- Bixby as conversational device agent: natural language for settings and navigation.
- Photo Assist: describe edits in plain language, with step-by-step review and undo.
Vantu of Vatvo Studio in Vietnam highlighted that Galaxy AI is tuned for Vietnamese usage patterns, baked into the system without third-party apps or monthly fees. Samsung also bundles Bixby as a conversational device agent that responds to natural-language settings commands, with Google Gemini and Perplexity available as integrated alternatives for multi-step tasks. Users can switch between the three agents depending on what they are trying to do.
Cameras Tested at Twin Peaks and on the Field
The S26 Ultra’s camera system is the second pillar reviewers kept returning to, in part because Samsung widened the apertures on the main lenses. The 200MP wide camera captures 47 percent more light, and the 50MP telephoto pulls in 37 percent more than the S25 Ultra. Samsung’s enhanced Nightography keeps footage clearer in dim scenes, whether indoors at a concert or outside around a campfire. The 200MP main, 50MP ultrawide, and dual telephoto setup (50MP at 5x, 10MP at 3x) give the Ultra the most versatile camera system Samsung has shipped to date.
Lely Maulida of Tekno.kompas.com in Indonesia took the phone to the Twin Peaks hills in San Francisco to test the claims after dusk. “I also tried out the Galaxy S26 Ultra’s zoom and Nightography capabilities in the Twin Peaks hills. Although the lighting around Twin Peaks is minimal after dusk, the details of the objects are still preserved. This includes the small details of the light from the lamps installed on the tower’s body,” Maulida wrote. The Twin Peaks test is a useful real-world check, since low-light telephoto is where most phone cameras fall apart.
Documenting fast-paced sports is the ultimate stress-test for any camera, let alone a smartphone. The Samsung Galaxy S26 Ultra passed with flying colors. It proved itself to be a fantastic, reliable tool for capturing high-stakes memories, backed by an impressive suite of pro-level hardware and software features.
The quote comes from Ramon Lopez, a writer for Revu in the Philippines, who put the Ultra through its paces on the kind of unpredictable motion that exposes slow shutters and wobbly autofocus. Beyond hardware, Samsung extended its AI image signal processor to the selfie camera for more natural skin tones in mixed lighting, and Photo Assist can now restore a bitten cake or change an outfit with a plain-language prompt. Both features are optional and vary by region.
Privacy Display Stands Out
The Privacy Display is the third pillar of the regional reviews, and the one Samsung has staked the most on. Samsung calls it the world’s first built-in Privacy Display, hardware that limits viewing from the sides, above and below without a stick-on screen protector. The feature took more than five years of research and development to ship, and it is toggleable in Settings, with options to trigger it for specific apps like banking or PIN entry.
After extended use, the Privacy Display emerges as one of the S26 Ultra’s defining features, for being a quiet but powerful innovation that could set the standard for mobile privacy going forward.
That assessment comes from Yonk at Geek Culture in Singapore, whose hands-on walkthrough of six new S26 Ultra features is the source for the pull quote and is detailed in Yonk’s hands-on with six new S26 Ultra features. Yonk’s testing did flag one trade-off: the Maximum Privacy Protection toggle introduces a noticeable greyish hue on dark-themed apps, most visible in camera mode. Munk TV, a regional reviewer, called the Privacy Display a gamechanger for daily commutes and sensitive tasks. “The Privacy Display is truly a gamechanger. Samsung was smart to make it a toggleable feature; if you don’t need it, you can just turn it off. It’s incredibly useful during my daily commute. While I’m personally not a fan of physical privacy films, having this built-in is vital for sensitive tasks like mobile banking,” Munk TV said.
The Hardware Behind the AI
The same chipset powers all three S26 models in markets that get Qualcomm silicon. The Snapdragon 8 Elite Gen 5 for Galaxy delivers a 19% CPU gain, a 39% NPU gain, and a 24% GPU gain over the previous generation, according to Samsung. A redesigned Vapor Chamber with thermal interface material along the sides of the processor spreads heat more efficiently, which matters most for always-on AI features that run in the background.
Battery capacity stays at 5,000mAh on the Ultra, but charging speeds have moved up. Super Fast Charging 3.0 reaches 75% in 30 minutes over 60W wired, with 25W Qi2 wireless on top. Samsung says the slimmer Ultra body did not come at the cost of thermal headroom, and the new chamber keeps the device cool during gaming and 4K capture. Wireless charging still lacks magnetic alignment for Qi2 accessories, which users will need a compatible case to fix.
| Spec | Galaxy S26 Ultra |
|---|---|
| Chipset | Snapdragon 8 Elite Gen 5 for Galaxy |
| Display | 6.9-inch QHD+ Dynamic AMOLED 2X, 2,600 nits peak |
| Rear cameras | 200MP wide, 50MP ultrawide, 50MP telephoto 5x, 10MP telephoto 3x |
| Front camera | 12MP |
| RAM | 12GB / 16GB |
| Storage | 256GB / 512GB / 1TB |
| Battery | 5,000mAh |
| Wired charging | 60W Super Fast Charging 3.0 (75% in 30 minutes) |
| Wireless charging | 25W Qi2 |
| Durability | IP68, Gorilla Armor 2, Gorilla Glass Victus 2 |
| OS | Android 16 with One UI 8.5 |
| Weight | 214g |
| Thickness | 7.9mm |
Benchmark numbers from Adam Turner’s 8.9-rated Galaxy S26 Ultra review put the Ultra at 3,770 single-core and 11,422 multi-core on Geekbench 6, with an OpenGL score of 23,805. All three numbers are more than 30% better than the S25 Ultra. Apple’s iPhone 17 Pro Max is the only device Turner’s chart places in the same performance tier, with a similar score on Geekbench 6 single-core. The iPhone pulls ahead on GPU-bound tasks, while the Ultra holds a slight edge on multi-core work. Gaming is where the new Vapor Chamber earns its keep, with sustained performance holding closer to peak than the S25 Ultra across longer sessions. Samsung has matched Google in promising seven years of Android OS updates and security fixes for the S26 lineup.
Where the Series Still Has Limits
The Ultra has drawn the strongest reviews, but the broader S26 lineup is a more incremental step. BGR’s Christian de Looper, reviewing the base S26 and S26+, called their design more or less exactly the same as the S25 series, with no new camera hardware. Charging on the base S26 tops out at 25W wired, which feels slow by 2026 standards in de Looper’s testing.
In Australia, the Ultra starts at $2,199, $50 more than the S25 Ultra at launch, per Gadget Guy. Turner’s review notes that the price hike lands in a market where interest rates and fuel costs have moved against premium phone buyers. Battery life on the smaller S26 and S26+ is solid, de Looper wrote, but not class-leading; OnePlus 15 and Honor’s Magic8 Pro, which use silicon-carbon cells, outlast Samsung on a charge. The Privacy Display’s Maximum mode introduces a greyish cast on dark themes, the one consistent caveat across the regional reviews.
Frequently Asked Questions
What is new about the Galaxy S26 Ultra compared to the S25 Ultra?
The S26 Ultra is 0.3mm thinner at 7.9mm, weighs 214 grams, runs on the Snapdragon 8 Elite Gen 5 for Galaxy chipset, and ships with the world’s first built-in Privacy Display on a phone. The 200MP main camera captures 47% more light, and the 50MP telephoto captures 37% more than its predecessor.
How does the Galaxy S26 Ultra’s Privacy Display work?
The Privacy Display uses pixel-level hardware to limit side, above, and below viewing angles, so onlookers cannot read the screen. Samsung developed it over more than five years. Users can toggle the feature on or off in Settings, set it to trigger automatically for specific apps such as banking or PIN entry, and choose between partial and maximum privacy modes.
What are Now Nudge and Now Brief on the Galaxy S26?
Now Nudge is a proactive AI feature that suggests photos from the Gallery when a friend asks about them, and detects calendar conflicts inside incoming messages. Now Brief is a daily summary widget that delivers agenda, weather, health and sleep data organized by time of day, in morning, afternoon, evening, and late-night blocks.
How much does the Galaxy S26 Ultra cost?
In Australia, the S26 Ultra starts at $2,199 AUD per Gadget Guy, $50 more than the S25 Ultra at launch. Pricing varies by storage tier and region.
When did Samsung launch the Galaxy S26 series?
Samsung unveiled the Galaxy S26, S26+, and S26 Ultra at Galaxy Unpacked in San Francisco on February 25, 2026. Global sales began rolling out from March 11, 2026, across more than 120 countries.





