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Samsung Galaxy S26 Ultra feels like a software update and that’s why it’s boring

Flagship phones are no longer defined by massive hardware leaps. They’re defined by balance.

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Samsung Galaxy S26 Ultra
Tom Bedford / Digital Trends

There was a time when upgrading to a new flagship phone felt like stepping into something noticeably better. Bigger batteries, sharper cameras, faster charging – real, tangible upgrades that justified both the hype and the price.

The Galaxy S26 Ultra doesn’t quite feel like that moment. It feels like refinement masquerading as reinvention.

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On paper, Samsung has done what it always does. The S26 Ultra comes with Qualcomm’s latest Snapdragon 8 Elite Gen 5 chip, delivering roughly a 10% CPU and 15% GPU improvement over last year’s model. It now supports up to 60W wired charging, up from 45W, and introduces features like a privacy display and new AI-powered tools layered across the system.

Individually, these upgrades sound meaningful. Collectively, they don’t feel transformative. Because the fundamentals – the things users actually notice – haven’t really moved.

The battery is still 5,000mAh. That’s the same capacity Samsung has used across multiple generations, from the S23 Ultra to the S25 Ultra. Charging is faster, yes, but not dramatically so. In real-world terms, you’re saving minutes, not changing behavior. And in some tests, battery performance is only marginally better, largely due to efficiency gains from the new chip rather than any hardware leap.

The camera story is even more telling

The S26 Ultra retains a triple 200-10-50MP setup, with slight tweaks like a wider f/1.4 aperture on the main sensor. But the sensor size remains largely unchanged, and that matters. Competitors like Xiaomi and Vivo have pushed into 1-inch-type sensors, which physically capture more light and detail, especially in low-light conditions. The difference isn’t just technical – it’s visible in depth, dynamic range, and natural detail.

Samsung’s approach, meanwhile, continues to rely heavily on computational photography. The results are still excellent, but they’re also familiar. Bright, sharp, slightly processed images that look good on social media but don’t necessarily push the envelope.

And that’s the recurring theme here: nothing is worse, but nothing is meaningfully better.

So Samsung leans into AI

The S26 Ultra is packed with AI features – image generation, object insertion, real-time editing, writing tools, and contextual suggestions. Some of these are genuinely impressive. You can take a photo, remove objects, change lighting conditions, or even insert entirely new elements using generative AI. You can rewrite messages in different tones or generate content directly from prompts.

Technically, it’s powerful. Practically, it’s complicated.

Because most of these features fall into two categories. The first is automation – things like translation, smart suggestions, or contextual actions. These are useful, but still inconsistent. Voice assistants like Bixby have improved, but they struggle with context and reliability. Ask a complex question, and you might still get an irrelevant answer.

The second category is generative AI – the flashy stuff. Image edits, creative tools, and content generation. These are fun, but rarely essential. And there are trade-offs. Many of these tools reduce image resolution, sometimes by as much as 20–30%, or output content that doesn’t match the device’s native display ratio. In some cases, a generated image might come out at 1024×1024 resolution on a phone that has a 2K display.

It’s impressive tech, but it doesn’t always hold up in real use

Which leads to a bigger question. If the most noticeable upgrades are software features that could theoretically roll out to older devices, what exactly are you upgrading for?

This is where the S26 Ultra starts to feel less like a new phone and more like a software update packaged as hardware. And it’s not just Samsung. This is becoming the direction of the entire industry.

Flagship phones are no longer defined by massive hardware leaps. They’re defined by balance.

The S26 Ultra is arguably the most complete Android phone you can buy. It has a great display, strong battery life, versatile cameras, long-term software support (up to seven years), and one of the most customizable software experiences through One UI. It even includes features no one else offers, like the integrated S Pen.

But in trying to be the perfect all-rounder, it avoids taking risks. It doesn’t have the largest battery. It doesn’t have the biggest camera sensor. It doesn’t have the fastest charging. It doesn’t push any single category to its limit.

Instead, it plays it safe. And safe is starting to feel predictable. Other brands are experimenting more aggressively. Some are pushing camera hardware, others are pushing battery tech or charging speeds. Not all of it works, but it creates a sense of momentum – of progress.

Samsung, on the other hand, is optimizing rather than reinventing. That makes the S26 Ultra an excellent phone for most people. It does everything well, and for the average user, that’s exactly what matters. The camera is more than good enough. The battery lasts a full day. The performance is smooth. The experience is reliable.

But for anyone looking for something new – something that feels like a leap – it falls short. The irony is that the S26 Ultra proves just how mature smartphones have become. The gaps between generations are shrinking. The need to upgrade every year is disappearing.

And maybe that’s the real takeaway

The Galaxy S26 Ultra isn’t a bad upgrade. It’s just not a necessary one. Because when your biggest innovations feel like features that could have been a software update, it’s a sign that the flagship race isn’t about breakthroughs anymore.

It’s about maintaining perfection. And perfection, as it turns out, can be a little boring.

Moinak Pal
Moinak Pal is has been working in the technology sector covering both consumer centric tech and automotive technology for the…
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