An early hands-on video, reportedly from Dubai where a retailer began selling units ahead of schedule, gives us a hands-on look at what Samsung calls its new “Zero-peeking privacy”. The feature is expected to be formally introduced on February 25, with retail availability tipped for March 11.

The video demonstrates how the feature works in real-world conditions. Instead of relying on a traditional privacy screen protector, the S26 Ultra builds the functionality directly into its AMOLED panel. Once enabled through the settings menu, the display dynamically narrows its viewing angles.
From straight on, everything looks normal. But tilt the phone even slightly to the side, and the screen darkens significantly. At more extreme angles, it can appear nearly black. It’s not a perfect blackout like some aggressive privacy filters, but it’s enough to make shoulder surfing far more difficult.
For everyday use, that could actually matter more than headline specs. Think reading private messages on the metro, checking banking apps in a café, entering passwords at the airport, or even browsing work documents near colleagues. It’s a small feature on paper, but one that solves a very real annoyance. Leaks also suggest Samsung may allow more granular control, possibly enabling privacy mode on a per-app basis.
Under the hood, Samsung is reportedly using what it calls FlexMagic Pixel OLED technology to achieve the effect. Interestingly, while most premium displays compete on wider viewing angles, Samsung appears to be intentionally limiting them, at least when you want it to.
Beyond the privacy feature, reports of exclusive online-only color options have also surfaced, adding to the pre-launch buzz. If this implementation works as smoothly as it appears in the early footage, the Galaxy S26 Ultra’s “Zero-peeking privacy” feature could end up being one of its most practical upgrades. Not flashier cameras. Not more brightness. Just smarter control over who gets to see your screen.
And honestly, that might be something more people appreciate than they expect.
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