Samsung Galaxy S26 Ultra Review: The Cost of Compromise

The Double-Edged Sword of Privacy

Samsung's

introduces a hardware innovation that feels like a rare win in a stagnant market: a built-in privacy display. This toggleable feature uses specialized narrow-angle pixels to shield your banking details or notifications from prying eyes. It is a genuinely useful tool for the security-conscious, yet it serves as a masterclass in hardware trade-offs. To enable this, Samsung split the subpixel layout between wide and narrow lenses. When privacy is active, you lose exactly half your resolution. Even with the feature off, "pixel peepers" will notice slightly degraded viewing angles and an 8-bit panel that lacks the depth of true 10-bit competitors. It remains a high-quality screen, but it is no longer the undisputed king of clarity.

Design Tweaks and Ergonomic Friction

Samsung smoothed the edges of the

, opting for a rounder aesthetic that aligns with its cheaper siblings. However, this shift introduces functional headaches. The curved corners mean the
S Pen
can only be inserted in one specific orientation, removing the "blind" convenience of the previous generation. Furthermore, the combination of a thinner chassis and a massive camera plateau creates a device that rocks aggressively on flat surfaces. While the return to aluminum from titanium might spark social media mockery, the real issue is the lack of internal evolution. The omission of
Qi2
magnets and silicon-carbon battery technology feels like a missed opportunity for a device claiming the "Ultra" mantle.

Performance and the AI Slop Factor

The

provides the expected 20-30% performance bump, ensuring the device handles multitasking with ease. Samsung focused heavily on the NPU to power a suite of "agentic" AI features. While
Call Screening
and audio erasers offer practical utility, much of the generative photo editing feels like unnecessary fluff—or "slop." These software tricks rarely justify a hardware upgrade, especially since most will eventually trickle down to older
Samsung
devices.

Samsung Galaxy S26 Ultra Review: The Cost of Compromise
Samsung Galaxy S26 Ultra Review: There's a Catch

Final Verdict

At $1,300, the

is a formidable, high-performing smartphone, but its "Ultra" status is increasingly defined by its price tag rather than groundbreaking internals. It plays it safe where it should have pushed boundaries, leaving the privacy display as its only unique calling card.

Samsung Galaxy S26 Ultra Review: The Cost of Compromise

Fancy watching it?

Watch the full video and context

3 min read