Samsung has begun teasing a new AI-driven camera experience set to debut at its Galaxy Unpacked launch event on 25 February – and it sounds like image editing will be more deeply integrated than before.
According to Samsung, its upcoming Galaxy camera system is designed to “unify photo and video capturing, editing, and sharing into one intuitive system”. The company says AI will power features capable of “restoring” missing parts of an image, merging multiple photos into a single result, transforming lighting conditions, and enhancing low-light detail.
The example shown off is a cupcake bite being seamlessly filled in – an infinite cupcake hack that we could only wish were possible in real life. The effect works well, but signed-off in-house marketing material always does. The real proof will be when we take the new features for a spin ourselves.
Elsewhere, Samsung also highlights tools that let users add elements to images through drawing or simple input, with AI generating a finished result directly inside the camera workflow. Take the aforementioned cupcake, hastily doodle a cheeky goblin with a cupcake-stealing sack, and presumably you’ll have a delightful render of a tiny dessert thief on the table next to it.
Set to land with the Galaxy S26
All signs point to these tools launching alongside the Samsung Galaxy S26 series, which Samsung has already confirmed will be unveiled in San Francisco on 25 February.
As noted in our Galaxy S26 preview, major camera hardware upgrades weren’t strongly rumoured this year. Instead, much of the focus appears to be shifting towards computational photography and Galaxy AI processing.
While disappointing for hardware fans. It doesn’t necessarily mean image quality stands still. Samsung has steadily refined its HDR handling, low-light processing and subject detection through software in recent generations.
This latest teaser suggests the S26 range could push further, folding more generative tools directly into the core camera experience rather than positioning them as standalone editing features.
Having said all that, though, some form of hardware upgrade would still be very welcome in our eyes, especially as Chinese manufacturers like Vivo, Oppo, and Xiaomi are constantly pushing boundaries with larger sensors and impressive zoom levels.
For now, we’ll get the full picture on 25 February, when Samsung formally reveals the Galaxy S26 lineup and details its next wave of AI-powered features. Watch this space.
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