How to Actually Get Good Videos at a Concert With the Samsung Galaxy S26 Ultra ...Middle East

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TL;DR key takeaways:

Turn on Super Steady[1] with Horizontal Lock before the lights go down so your footage stays level, even when the crowd starts moving.

The 50-megapixel telephoto’s 5x optical zoom and 10x optical-quality zoom mean you can get close-ups of the performers from wherever you’re standing.

With the Samsung Galaxy S26 Ultra, you can say goodbye to post-show letdown. The camera system in Samsung's latest flagship is built to perform under the pressure of dim venues and packed crowds, so you can stay present for the show and trust the footage will live up to your memories. A 200-megapixel main sensor paired with a wider F1.4 aperture pulls in more light to keep detail sharp after dark, and Galaxy AI tools[3] handle the rest once you've made it to the after-party.

Galaxy S26 Ultra Capture the moment with up to 5x optical zoom and a 200-megapixel main sensor at Samsung Shop Now Shop Now at Samsung

Before the support act walks onstage: 

Tap the Super Steady[4] icon (a figure-in-motion symbol at the top of the screen) and select the Horizontal Lock option at the right-hand side of the menu. 

Step 2: Zoom in on the action without fighting the crowd

Standing tickets three rows from the back? The telephoto lens on the Galaxy S26 Ultra lets you get an up-close-and-personal perspective anyway. The 50-megapixel telephoto features 5x optical zoom, 10x optical-quality zoom, and up to 100x Space Zoom for photos, so you can frame tight shots of the performers from wherever you're posted up (even if that’s in the very back of an arena).

Open the Camera app and frame your shot. The zoom controls sit along the bottom of the viewfinder as a row of shortcut buttons (0.6x, 2x, 5x, etc.). 

For 10x optical-quality zoom, tap the 10x shortcut button or keep pinching out. This combines optical zoom with on-device processing to hold detail at longer distances; it works in both Photo and Video mode.

If you’re zooming beyond 10x, consider bracing your phone against a railing or seat-back, since the smallest hand movement at that level of magnification can affect the frame.

Here’s how to take advantage of one of the phone’s key features, Nightography[5]:

For photos, a yellow moon icon will appear in the lower-right corner of your camera frame. Tap it, and the phone will offer a range of exposure lengths (longer durations for darker scenes). 

In Video mode, Nightography runs continuously the moment you hit record.

Step 4: Tidy up post-show stills with Photo Assist

At a high-energy show, you'll invariably end up with a few unwanted extras in your frames, like that crowd-surfer who sailed through your shot mid-set. To salvage it:

Tap the AI icon at the centre of the bottom toolbar (the sparkly stars icon).

Photo Assist can remove stray limbs in your shot, swap a background, shift the lighting to a different time of day, or even merge two images together. Edits save as copies, so your originals stay intact—which is handy if you later decide the slightly-blurry-but-emotive version was better than the perfectly crisp one.

Step 5: Turn your best shot into something share-worthy with Creative Studio

To start creating:

Pick one of your concert photos, describe what you want (a sticker pack, a greeting card, or an invitation).

The tool draws from the photo and builds a styled asset you can send via email or a messaging app.

Galaxy S26 series camera specs at a glance

Here's how the Galaxy S26, Galaxy S26+ and Galaxy S26 Ultra compare across the camera features that matter most for live music.

See the full Galaxy S26 Series line-up at samsung.com.

Frequently asked questions about the Samsung Galaxy S26 Ultra camera:

How do I stop my concert video from looking shaky? 

The Galaxy S26 Ultra makes this simple. Just turn on Super Steady with Horizontal Lock before the show starts.

Will Nightography work for indoor venues with stage lights? 

[1] Super Steady results may vary depending on editing method and/or shooting conditions. [2] Results may vary depending on light condition, subject and/or shooting conditions. [3] Samsung account login is required for certain AI features. Galaxy AI features are provided for free. Future releases may include additional advanced features that are offered as part of a paid subscription plan. Different terms may apply for AI features provided by third parties.[4] Super Steady results may vary depending on editing method and/or shooting conditions. [5] Results may vary depending on light condition, subject and/or shooting conditions. [6] Requires network connection and Samsung account login. A visible watermark is overlaid on the saved image to indicate it was generated by Galaxy AI. Accuracy of output not guaranteed.[7] Requires network connection and Samsung account login. Accuracy of output not guaranteed.

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