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I thought I’d seen it all, then the Galaxy S26 Ultra pulled these 3 tricks

Nailing the little things that most phones ignore, and then delivering a smackdown out of nowhere.

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Electronics, Phone, Mobile Phone
The Samsung Galaxy S26 Ultra, faced down on a desk with its stylus out. Tom Bedford / Digital Trends

After reviewing phones over the last few years, very little surprises me anymore. Bigger sensors, faster chips, and brighter displays, I’ve seen it all. Most of the time, the new “IT” factor revolves around hardware upgrades in these areas. So when a phone genuinely makes me think, “Okay, that’s pretty clever”, it feels like a breath of fresh air.

The Galaxy S26 Ultra does just that. Apart from the flagship specs and the typical annual hardware updates, Samsung’s latest and greatest offers a host of thoughtful features that quietly improve everyday use, and that’s what I love about it.

Now Nudge turns AI hype into a practical savior

Tired of having AI shoved in your face at every turn? Samsung’s Now Nudge is an unintrusive assistant that does its job in the background. This isn’t a flashy AI assistant that bugs you try out new features; instead, it works quietly and offers timely suggestions that can be useful. 

Samsung’s own example nails it. If someone asks you to share trip photos, the S26 Ultra can nudge you toward the right Gallery items instead of making you dig through albums. Or if a message mentions a meeting, it can surface relevant calendar context and potential conflicts. This is the kind of AI that respects your time and attention. Its strength is its subtlety. 

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Now Nudge works with the AI reading your messaging thread, which does raise some red flags. Though Samsung claims that the AI processing is done on-device. One small detail that many have missed is that the feature requires a Samsung Account, and availability can vary depending on the region and apps.

Privacy Display is just spy-grade tech

When early leaks hinted at a Privacy Display feature, it didn’t sound particularly groundbreaking. But after seeing it in action, I quickly realize that it is one of those ideas that makes you wonder why it wasn’t done properly sooner. Older implementations of such a feature involved either using a privacy filter screen or a software feature that alerts you to any spying eyes by using the front camera. 

Neither of these is very practical, but Samsung has you covered. It builds privacy directly into the system UI and display. The screen intelligently limits viewing angles without tanking brightness or readability. Samsung uses narrower pixels and controls how the light is projected. When it’s on, it limits side-angle visibility while keeping the screen clear for you. It apparently also works even as you switch between portrait and landscape.

Check it out in action below:

The #GalaxyHangout Cube is on another level 🔥 If you’re anywhere near Fourways today, this is your sign to pull through. Step inside and get hands-on with the future of mobile tech — including the world’s first built-in Privacy Display, available exclusively on the… pic.twitter.com/TALi7RncLq

— Samsung Mobile SA (@SamsungMobileSA) February 28, 2026

The part I like most is that it’s not just “all or nothing.” Samsung is giving you plenty of useful options to choose from when it activates (entering PIN/passwords), select specific apps, and even use Partial Screen Privacy for things like notification pop-ups, with a Maximum Privacy Protection mode for more aggressive hiding.

Horizontal Lock looks like a magic trick

Before I get into the deets, I’ll just give you a real-world demo of this cool feature.

From cooking to travel, dogs running to cats catwalking, the gimbal has been a companion to content creators for years.
Where will these motorised handles fit in as people start using Samsung’s Horizontal Lock feature on the Galaxy S26 Ultra? pic.twitter.com/TuyQNsn819

— Mathures Paul (@MathuresP) February 27, 2026

And here’s another one:

The Galaxy S26 Ultra has a “ wow” feature with video Lock horizontally. pic.twitter.com/mLQi7iHBrE

— Ice Universe (@UniverseIce) February 26, 2026

While Privacy Display grabbed most of the attention, the new super-stabilised video mode is what intrigued me the most. It feels like a mix of software wizardry and clever hardware use. In plain English, it’s an upgraded Super Steady mode that keeps your footage level even while you’re moving around.

In action, the S26 Ultra managed to capture level footage even after being put through a full 360-degree spin. Samsung combines data from the phone’s gyroscope and accelerometer with software processing to keep the horizon locked. It’s genuinely one of those “you have to see it to believe it” features, and I even had to look it up after the official announcement to see how it works. 

The Wrap-up

Samsung’s best “wow” moments weren’t the over-the-top hardware upgrades, like the massive battery capacities in Chinese phones; they were simply quality-of-life updates that feel designed around how people actually use phones in public, at work, and on the move.

Now Nudge is AI used properly (quietly, contextually), Privacy Display is the rare privacy feature you’ll want to turn on daily, and Horizontal Lock is one of those camera upgrades that makes your videos look better without extra effort or peripheral.  

With the Ultra on the front, the rest of the Galaxy S26 lineup feels fairly safe and iterative. Outside of predictable spec bumps, there isn’t much that truly stands out. These thoughtful upgrades are what stop the S26 Ultra from blending into yet another routine year-on-year refresh. It also helps define its identity as the true flagship from Samsung, giving it a personality of its own. With features like these, I’m far more interested in the “little things” than chasing headline specs.

Vikhyaat Vivek
Vikhyaat Vivek is a tech journalist and reviewer with seven years of experience covering consumer hardware, with a focus on…
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