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Home » Samsung may finally kill the Galaxy Ultra’s most criticised camera lens
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Samsung may finally kill the Galaxy Ultra’s most criticised camera lens

By technologistmag.com27 May 20263 Mins Read
Samsung may finally kill the Galaxy Ultra’s most criticised camera lens
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Samsung may finally be preparing a major shake-up for its flagship Galaxy S lineup. According to new leaks, the company is reportedly testing a new Galaxy S27 Pro model that could sit between the standard Galaxy S27 and the Galaxy S27 Ultra. More interestingly, the phone may end up offering a surprisingly different camera experience from the Ultra itself.

The biggest change revolves around Samsung’s telephoto camera strategy – an area where Galaxy Ultra phones have faced criticism for years.

Samsung could finally kill its most criticised camera lens

According to the latest rumours, both the Galaxy S27 Pro and Galaxy S27 Ultra are expected to share the same 200MP primary camera and ultrawide sensor. The major difference would come from the zoom camera setup. The Galaxy S27 Pro is tipped to feature a new 50MP ALoP telephoto sensor with 3.5x optical zoom, while the Galaxy S27 Ultra may use a separate 50MP telephoto camera with 5x optical zoom.

More importantly, Samsung is reportedly planning to remove the long-criticised 3x telephoto lens from the Ultra model entirely. That lens has been one of the weaker points of recent Galaxy Ultra phones, often delivering inconsistent image quality compared to Samsung’s stronger 5x zoom hardware and high-resolution main camera.

If the rumours are accurate, Samsung could instead rely more heavily on sensor cropping from its 200MP primary camera for intermediate zoom levels. That may simplify the camera system while improving overall image consistency.

Ironically, the Galaxy S27 Pro’s 3.5x optical zoom setup could potentially offer a more balanced and practical photography experience for many users. Mid-range zoom levels are often more useful for portraits, food photography, pets, and everyday shooting than extreme long-range zoom.

Samsung may finally be fixing its “Middle Child” problem

The leak also suggests Samsung is rethinking the structure of its flagship lineup itself. For years, the Galaxy S Ultra models have received nearly all of Samsung’s premium hardware, while the standard and Plus models often felt like compromised alternatives with fewer standout features. That left many buyers stuck between choosing a compact phone or getting the fully featured Ultra. The Galaxy S27 Pro may finally address that gap.

Samsung S26 Plus

Reports suggest Samsung wants the Pro model to act as a true premium flagship rather than a slightly upgraded Plus variant. The main compromise compared to the Ultra could simply be the absence of the S Pen and some differences in zoom range.

That strategy mirrors what companies like Apple have done with the iPhone Pro lineup, where users can choose between two premium flagships rather than one clearly superior option.

Why this matters

If Samsung follows through with these changes, the Galaxy S27 series could become one of the company’s biggest flagship redesigns in years. The removal of the 3x telephoto camera alone would address one of the longest-running complaints surrounding Galaxy Ultra cameras. Meanwhile, a more premium Galaxy S27 Pro could finally give users a flagship Samsung phone without forcing them into the massive Ultra form factor.

At the same time, it is important to remember these are still early leaks. Samsung is reportedly testing multiple prototypes internally, meaning specifications and camera setups could still change before launch. Samsung is expected to unveil the Galaxy S27 lineup in early 2027. Until then, more leaks surrounding the camera hardware, chipset, battery upgrades, and final product naming are likely to emerge over the coming months.

For now, though, the Galaxy S27 Pro is already shaping up to be one of Samsung’s most interesting flagship experiments in years – and possibly the phone that finally fixes the company’s awkward middle-ground problem.

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