Skip to main content

Here’s what I want to see from the Samsung Galaxy S22 series

As we gear up for Samsung Galaxy Unpacked 2022 on February 9, certain things are expected. We will certainly get new phones like the Galaxy S22, which was pretty much assured by Samsung’s promise of a Note-worthy event, and we may see tablets like the Tab S8 as well. Samsung’s Galaxy S21 Ultra was one of the best phones I’ve ever used, and probably the best camera experience you could get on a phone in 2021. So it’s very exciting to see its successor.

Leading up to the event, though, I wanted to share some things I hope to see from the S22 series. Since phones are the only real guarantee right now, I’ll focus on those, though I can think of a few things I’d like to see from rumored tablets as well. Some of these wishes are entirely possible, based on technologies available on other smartphones, while others are, to use a Samsung term, “moon shots.”

S Pen slot in the Galaxy S22 Ultra

A Samsung S21 Ultra with S Pen.
Andy Boxall/Digital Trends

Last year, we got S Pen compatibility in the Galaxy S21 Ultra for the first time. That experience was hobbled by the need for a special case and a separate S Pen. It was not an awesome experience, and definitely not “Note-worthy.” One of my only complaints about the Ultra last year was the “duct tape and baling wire” solution that Samsung seemed to offer for the S Pen. It seemed like the S Pen was an oversight that was corrected at the last minute.

This year, it seems likely the S22 Ultra will finally deliver a truly noteworthy experience by putting an S Pen slot inside the body of the phone. Now that Samsung has had an extra year to figure all this out, this is the year to do it right. I wouldn’t be surprised if Samsung simply called it the S22 Note instead of the S22 Ultra. In fact, I think it should. It would be a great way to continue the Note legacy that is arguably part of why Samsung is in the place it is these days. Sure, a few billion dollars in marketing helped, but many tech enthusiasts look back at the Note as the start of a new and wonderful era. Keep it going, Samsung.

Premium build materials

The camera bump on the back of the Samsung Galaxy S21 FE (right) is less pronounced than on the S21 Ultra.
Adam Doud/Digital Trends

Last year’s Samsung Galaxy S21 lineup started at an impressive price point. But that price point lost a lot of its luster in light of the compromises that were made. Most point to the plastic backplate as a major stumbling block that kept the S21 from being considered a “true” flagship. While I personally don’t have a problem with polycarbonate build materials in midrange/budget phones, my colleague Andy Boxall goes into great detail about why the S22 lineup should be considered the best of the best, and not suffer the indignity of a plastic back.

Bigger aperture for the periscope lens

The Samsung Galaxy Note 20 Ultra and Note 20 S Pen.
Andy Boxall/Digital Trends

Last year’s Samsung Galaxy S21 Ultra still offers the best camera experience you can find on an Android phone right now along with the Pixel 6 Pro. I particularly loved the 10x zoom lens, but it came with a fairly small f/4.9 aperture. It’s fine during the day in broad daylight, but if the lighting was a little bit dim, image quality suffered quite a bit. Most of the time, I noticed this during indoor events when the lighting wasn’t the best.

One of the biggest use cases for a powerful zoom is capturing things close up when you can’t be close up. Often, that’s in a concert hall, or a playing field, or a gym. Those won’t always have the best lighting, and if you can’t capture a good image, there’s no point in having the zoom lens in the first place.

Periscope zoom lenses are fairly new, so there are plenty of allowances here. But if there’s any way Samsung can up its telephoto game, that would make the best even better. Isn’t that the point?

Cleaner hybrid zoom

The Samsung S21 Ultra camera's zoom lens.
Andy Boxall/Digital Trends

While we’re on the topic of zoom, let’s talk about Samsung’s hybrid zoom capability. On the S21 Ultra, Samsung claimed you could zoom into 100x Space Zoom, Let’s just say the results were pretty mixed. If your goal was to capture text from a long way away, hybrid zoom did pretty well with that. But once you moved away from angular shapes and into the more organic shapes of trees, landscape, and people, you start to get modern art masterpieces rather than photos.

Samsung has spent a lot of time and processing power working on the algorithms behind zoom processing, and for the record, up to 30x was pretty serviceable on the Galaxy S21 Ultra. But if Samsung is going to continue to promise 100x Space Zoom, then there’s a lot of work to be done there.

Faster charging

The Samsung Galaxy S21 Ultra charges up.
Andy Boxall/Digital Trends

Last year’s Samsung Galaxy S21 series of phones were limited to 25-watt fast charging and 15W wireless charging. Personally, I have never been one to advocate for faster charging since I charge my phones overnight. But technology has gotten a lot better even in the past year. The OnePlus 9 Pro is capable of 50W wireless charging, to say nothing about the impressive 65W wired charging it’s capable of. And while it’s not available in the U.S., the Xiaomi 11i HyperCharge can safely charge at an incredible 120W.

When that kind of speed is possible, plugging in your phone overnight is less of a necessity. Topping off before heading out is crazy fast. Not only that, but some phones last year and this year have started to ship 65W chargers in the box. This is not a huge ask for Samsung, especially since things have reached the point where 25W charging is laughably slow.

It’s not too much to ask

Are all of these first-world problems? Absolutely. But when you’re looking at phones north of $1,000, those are the kinds of fixes you want. This is a fairly short list of things that could put the S22 series of phones above and beyond the rest of the competition, and if that’s not Samsung’s goal, what are they even doing here? So we’ll all stand by for Unpacked on February 9 and see what Samsung has to offer.

Adam Doud
Former Digital Trends Contributor
Adam had been writing in the tech space for nearly a decade. When not hosting the Benefit of the Doud podcast, he can be…
Here’s the first proper look at the Samsung Galaxy S25 Ultra
Galaxy S25 Ultra render.

Apple has announced the iPhone 16 series, and now that it's official, attention will soon turn to Samsung's Galaxy S lineup. It’s fitting that Android Headlines chose this week to reveal what seems to be the first look at the redesigned Samsung Galaxy S25 Ultra.

The smartphone, anticipated to launch in January or February, features some noticeable design changes that align with earlier rumors about the new flagship. The most significant difference is that all four sides of the phone are now flat. The Galaxy S24 Ultra features flat sides at the top and bottom but slightly rounded ones on the other two sides.

Read more
Your Galaxy S24 is about to get a big software update. Here’s what’s new
Someone holding the Samsung Galaxy S24 Plus.

Samsung Galaxy S24 users will soon receive new AI features on their devices. The company has begun rolling out the One UI 6.1.1 update for Galaxy S24, Galaxy S24 Plus, and Galaxy S24 Ultra users. The 2.8GB update includes the September 2024 security patch and many new features, most of which are AI-based.

This update introduces enhanced productivity tools such as Note Assist, PDF Overlay Translation, and Sketch to Image. Note Assist can translate and summarize meeting notes and create transcripts from voice recordings. PDF Overlay Translation allows you to translate text into PDF files, images, and graphs. The Sketch to Image feature generates image options based on simple sketches.

Read more
Samsung’s next tablet may have a big edge over the iPad Pro
Recent apps view on the Samsung Galaxy Tab S9 Ultra.

Over the past few weeks, we’ve come across a few purported product renders of the next flagship Samsung tablet, along with some details of its key specs. Now, leaker Evan Blass has shared an alleged render of the Galaxy Tab S10 Ultra that reveals one stunning detail.

Alongside the bottom edge of the tablet, we get not one, but two USB Type-C ports. This isn't the first time we have seen this feature, but it is a fresh approach for Samsung tablets. The rest of the design — including its slim metallic shell, dual cameras, thin bezels, and notch — is carried over from its predecessor, the Galaxy Tab S9 Ultra.

Read more