Samsung lied? Galaxy S26 phones feature artificial 10-bit display, not true hardware
Galaxy S26, S26+, and S26 Ultra donβt use a 10-bit display that Samsung showcased at launch. The correction came after the Unpacked event, after the specs went out, after people started pre-ordering based on what Samsung revealed.
During the Galaxy S26 Ultra launch, Samsung representatives mentioned the upgrade to a 10-bit display. A genuine upgrade, especially when you consider that brands like OnePlus, Xiaomi, and even Oppo have been shipping 10-bit phones for years now.
However, a Samsung spokesperson reached out to SamMobile days later with a quiet walk-back: actually, itβs 8-bit color depth. And thatβs not just the Ultra, but the standard S26 and the S26+ are also rocking 8-bit panels.
A proper 10-bit display can render 1.07 billion colors, while an 8-bit display can render 16.7 million. The difference shows up in gradients, less banding, smoother transitions, and more accurate color reproduction.
The Korean tech giant appears to be using frame rate control, or FRC, to simulate 10-bit output on 8-bit hardware. Itβs often called β8-bit + FRCβ in the industry, and it does reduce banding compared to plain 8-bit.
Ice Universe isnβt panicking about the 8-bit thing. Heβs more worried about something else: overall display quality. His advice? Go to a store, set both the S25 Ultra and S26 Ultra to 2K resolution, disable Privacy Mode, and look closely at text rendering, then decide.
Samsungβs the biggest Android player on the planet, and theyβre still shipping 8-bit displays while the competition moved on. You can dress it up with FRC and call it good enough, but the fact remains unchanged.
If you pre-ordered based on that 10-bit claim, youβve got every right to be annoyed.
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