Skip to main content
  1. Home
  2. Phones
  3. News

Galaxy S26 Ultra camera looks familiar, your upgrade might feel minor

Leak says the rear sensors match S25 Ultra, with only the 3x moving to a 12MP S5K3LD.

Add as a preferred source on Google
samsung-galaxy-s25
Samsung Mobile Press

What’s happened? A new firmware leak points to a quieter year for Samsung’s camera hardware. The Galaxy S26 Ultra is tipped to reuse most of the S25 Ultra’s rear sensors, with a lone swap on the 3x telephoto. Take the leak with a grain of salt though,

  • According to the leaker chunvn888, primary and 5x telephoto reportedly stay the same as last year.
  • The 3x moves to a 12MP S5K3LD sensor, the same physical size as the old 10MP unit.
  • Aperture numbers remain unknown. If Samsung opens the lenses wider on the main and 5x, expect small low-light lifts that lean on processing.

Galaxy S26 Ultra sensors debugged details:
200MP HP2
50MP JN3 ultrawide
12MP S5K3LD 3x tele
50MP IMX854 peris 5x
12MP IMX874 selfie
Only change this time is the traditional 10MP 3x 1/1.39 size sensor is replaced by newer 12MP K3LD. Rest are the exact same as 25U

— yawn (@chunvn8888) November 6, 2025

This is important because: For many buyers, the Ultra lives or dies by camera gains. If the hardware is mostly familiar, the S26 Ultra risks feeling like a tune-up, not a reset, even if the software does more heavy lifting.

  • Same-size 12MP swap on the 3x likely means similar detail and noise for portraits and indoor zoom.
  • Wider apertures, if they happen, probably deliver incremental gains, especially with moving subjects.
  • Real strides may come from multi-frame blending and tone mapping, which help, but rarely beat larger sensors. Compared to the best camera phones out now, this could be a real differentiator.
  • Video sees practical tweaks with new APV HQ and LQ options for quality versus file size.
Recommended Videos

Why should I care? If you were hoping for a night-and-day jump, temper expectations. The S26 Ultra should still shoot great photos, but with familiar hardware, your day-to-day results may look a lot like last year’s.

  • Portraits at 3x could remain close to the S25 Ultra, since the new 12MP sensor is the same size.
  • Low light may tick up with wider lenses and tuning, but larger sensors are what move the needle for motion and mid-zoom texture.
  • Processing can boost color and HDR, yet it will not fix optical limits like smearing at mid-zoom.
  • If you shoot video, the new APV options help balance quality and storage.

Okay, so what’s next? Wait for final specs and real-world tests. If Samsung confirms wider apertures and stronger processing, the S26 Ultra could still land modest wins in tough light, even if the hardware feels familiar.

  • Watch for aperture values on the main and 5x, pixel size, and any stabilization tweaks.
  • Put the new APV modes through rolling-shutter, heat, and low-light noise tests.
  • Day-one checklist: 3x indoor portraits, 5x night street shots, fast action, and brutal HDR scenes.
  • Charging matters too, with rumors of a 55W-to-45W curve that could make quick top-ups feel faster.
Paulo Vargas
Paulo Vargas is an English major turned reporter turned technical writer, with a career that has always circled back to…
iPhone users can finally get live translation on their headphones through Google Translate
Google Translate goes hands-free on iOS
google-translate-live-translation-headphone-ios

Google is bringing one of its best AI-powered Google Translate features to iPhone users at last. Live Translate with headphones is now rolling out on iOS, months after its debut on Android in December.

The feature turns your headphones into a real-time translator to help you understand conversations as they happen without staring at your phone.

Read more
Motorola leak reveals the upcoming Razr 70 Ultra, and it doesn’t want to change one bit
Electronics, Mobile Phone, Phone

In typical Motorola fashion, the Razr series has leaked once again, and this time we’re getting our first proper look at the Razr 70 Ultra. The renders come courtesy of XpertPick, in collaboration with Steve Hemmerstoffer, also known as OnLeaks on X (formerly Twitter).

Is there anything fresh here?

Read more
Siri could soon support third-party AI tools in major iOS update
Apple lets Siri phone a friend (and it’s AI)
Siri

Apple is reportedly preparing one of the most significant changes to Siri in years, with plans to open its voice assistant to third-party AI services as part of the upcoming iOS 27 update. The move signals a major shift in Apple’s artificial intelligence strategy, transforming Siri from a closed assistant into a broader AI platform that can integrate with competing technologies.

A Shift Toward An Open AI Ecosystem

Read more