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Features

Samsung OLED S95C: A console gamer’s GadgetMatch

And more

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If you go through certain console groups online, you’ll notice that Samsung isn’t exactly one of the top TV recommendations to pair with your gaming device of choice. That could very well change with the Samsung OLED TV

The Samsung OLED TV S95C (which we’ll call S95C from here on out for brevity) is equipped with all the bells and whistles you’d want for your gaming needs. And that goes for any type of gamer.

Let’s go through the fine print.

Listed as its top features are as follows: 

  • Quantum HDR OLED+
  • Expert Calibration 
  • Motion Xcelerator Turbo Pro
  • 120Hz, Up to 144Hz Refresh Rate
  • Object Tracking Sound (OTS+)
  • Dolby Atmos 

Also of note are its four (4) HDMI 2.1 ports as well as support for VRR or Variable Refresh Rate. There are more specs but those will probably just fly over our heads. However, in case you’d want to see them, you can check them out on the official product page

Let’s get down to how I spent my time with it. 

A console gamer’s GadgetMatch

Samsung OLED S95C | NBA 2K23

NBA 2K23

We primarily used the S95C with a console and played a few different genres. But I spent the most time playing an action RPG and a sports game.

There’s a reason I prefer playing on consoles. I’m not big on having to tweak so many settings before I play. For someone like myself who has to juggle multiple tasks, having something that’s plug and play is a godsend. 

To a certain extent, the S95C is the same thing. It’s literally plug and play. I fire up the console and it instantly detects and shifts to that input source. Once there, Game Mode kicks in automatically turning on a bunch of features that will improve your overall gameplay experience. 

This includes ALLM or auto low latency mode which reduces the delay from controller input to in-game action. There’s also the S95C’s 144Hz refresh rate with AMD’s Freesync Premium Pro making for an ultra smooth play session. 

It sounds like a lot laid out like this. But in reality, all of these kick-in as soon as you fire up the console. It’s not something you have to worry about. It just works. And, personally, that’s the benchmark for truly great tech. It enhances your experience without getting in your way. 

But tweaking is most certainly possible 

Samsung OLED S95C

And just because it works great right off the bat, doesn’t mean you can’t customize things to your liking. The thing about Smart TVs, and with the S95C in particular, is it lets you watch and play the way you want. 

For instance, when I first fired it up, I thought the HDR kicked in a little too much. Especially since I like to play in the dark. To adjust, I only had to press and hold the play/pause button on the remote control to pull up the improved Game Bar 3.0. From there, I could easily access gaming settings, select HDR, and toggled a few things on-off until I got to the level of HDR I was comfortable with. 

This granular control extends to general viewing too. I know some people like it, but I personally am not a fan of motion smoothing. It’s called different names on different TVs. But it’s essentially that “telenovela” effect which is always turned on when you go to see these TVs in store. 

Samsung OLED S95C | Momo

It’s a feature that uses the TV’s AI feature to fill-in the ‘gaps’ to match its frame rate settings. For example, a movie shot in 24fps (frames per second) will look drastically different and not at all how its director intended it to be viewed, when it’s trying to match a TV’s 60fps setting.

Thankfully, you can switch this off if you wish to do so. On Samsung, the feature is called Auto Motion Plus. You just have to dig into the Picture settings a little bit. You can lower its effect or turn it off altogether. Whatever the case is, the choice is ultimately yours. 

The high FPS is great for gaming though

Samsung OLED S95C | Final Fantasy XVI

Samsung OLED S95C | Final Fantasy XVI

You can definitely turn that high fps setting for general viewing, but this doesn’t mean it’s applied to every input on the S95C. It’s smart enough to know whether you’re there to sit back and watch or you’re there to kick some virtual *ss. 

Game Mode will kick in only when you fire up your console. And the settings you set will stay as they are so you don’t necessarily have to tweak them again unless you want to. That really depends on the type of games you’re playing. 

The Game Bar 3.0 mentioned earlier lets you choose a setting for different genres of games. There’s sport, RPG, First-Person shooter, and a few more. Personally, I didn’t feel the need to change this and mostly played on Standard and the results were still amazing. 

During my time with the S95C, I played a lot of Final Fantasy XVI which some gamers were up in arms about having a framerate mode that wasn’t up to par. Playing on the S95C, I stuck with the graphics mode of the game but I was still constantly hitting 60fps thanks to the TV. 

The other game I played heavily is NBA 2K23 which put the input latency to the test. I can happily say I pulled off my limited bag of crossovers, stepbacks, and hesitation dribbles with little to no input lag. It’s for this type of game where latency matters since you want your button presses to be as precise as possible.

Elevated sound with the HW-Q600C Soundbar

What are good visuals if you don’t have fantastic audio to go along with it? Thankfully, Samsung also lent us the HW-Q600C Soundbar. With it, both the playing and watching experience is infinitely better. 

The Q-Series soundbars are best to pair with Samsung TVs thanks to the Q-Symphony feature. What it does is let you use the TV speakers in tandem with the soundbar for a more full sound. 

Samsung OLED S95C | Apple TV, HW-Q600C Soundbar

Apple TV, HW-Q600C Soundbar

It even works great with the 3D audio feature of the console we used. While I can’t say it helped a lot in actual gameplay, it definitely contributed to enriching the experience. 

It has support for Dolby Atmos and DTS X so any content with these features you’ll definitely find more enjoyable. During my time with it, I watched Secret Invasion. I also stumbled onto Hijack on AppleTV+ which is easily one of the best shows you can binge right now. 

Samsung OLED S95C | Momo

During workdays, I had music videos lined up, most notably those by TWICE subunit group MISAMO. There’s also a healthy mix of K-Pop, K-RNB, and some animé songs here and there. All of which sounded great thanks to the HW-Q600C.

The Samsung S95C OLED TV is for any type of gamer 

The Samsung OLED S95C with the HW-Q600C Q Soundbar is a killer combo for gamers. They’re designed to specifically enhance your play sessions making your escape from reality even more enjoyable. 

While I personally loved that they are literally plug and play, its true power lies in its ability to be customized to your preferences. Nothing screams “GadgetMatch” more than a device that can mold itself to your liking. 

If you’re looking to level up your gaming set-up, the Samsung OLED S95C with the HW-Q600C soundbar are the gadgets you should definitely equip to maximize your play time. 


As of writing, Samsung is offering the Samsung OLED and Q Soundbars at a discount in celebration of their 25th anniversary in the Philippines. 

The Samsung OLED S95C is available in 55-inch (SM Appliance exclusive model), 65-inch, and 77-inch.

S95C 55-inch
SRP: Php 110,999
Straight Card/Cash Promo: Php 79,999. Comes with FREE Q600C Soundbar and 1-yr Disney+ Premium Access.

S95C 65-inch
SRP: Php 134,999
Straight Card/Cash Promo: Php 101,999. Comes with FREE Q600C Soundbar and 1-yr Disney+ Premium Access.

S95C 77-inch
SRP: Php 199,999
Straight Card/Cash Promo: Php 164,999. Comes with FREE Q800C Soundbar and 1-yr Disney+ Premium Access.

The HW-Q600C Soundbar retails for Php 23,999, with a discounted price for straight card and cash payments Php 14,999. 

Visit any authorized Samsung dealer today.

Features

Galaxy AI on the Samsung Galaxy S26 Ultra

So you can focus more on what matters

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Galaxy S26 Ultra
@gadgetmatch A phone that does more… so you can focus more on the moments that matter. The Galaxy S26 Ultra lets Galaxy AI handle the small stuff so you can stay present for the moments that matter. Also great for the occasional KPop concert video. Pre-order until March 17 and get double storage worth up to PhP 14,000. https://www.samsung.com/ph/smartphones/galaxy-s26-ultra/buy/ #GalaxyS26Ultra #EverydaywithGalaxyAI @samsungph ♬ original sound – GadgetMatch


Here’s the dream: a phone that helps you stay on top of things, so you can focus more on what matters.

That’s basically the idea behind Galaxy AI on the Samsung Galaxy S26 Ultra.

Instead of adding more things to do, the phone helps take care of the small stuff for you. Things like reminding you what’s next, or surfacing the information you need right when you need it.

So you spend less time digging through apps and more time actually doing the things you planned to do.

Editing photos is easier too. With Photo Assist, you can just describe the change you want… and Galaxy AI fills in the rest.

And if you’re cleaning up a video, Audio Eraser can reduce background noise — even from clips on third-party apps like Instagram or YouTube.

The point isn’t to make your phone the center of attention. It’s to make it helpful enough that you can forget about it for a while. Until something worth capturing happens.

And when things get a little chaotic — like concerts, street performances, or just life moving fast — Super Steady Video helps keep your shots level.

That’s definitely coming with me to the next K-pop concert.

The Galaxy S26 Ultra. Smarter phone. Slightly less stressed me.
Pre-orders are open now — with double storage for early buyers, plus additional discounts and installment offers from participating banks.

Which is great… because apparently I shoot way too many videos.

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Features

Samsung is done chasing specs, says TM Roh

Samsung shifts beyond spec wars

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For more than a decade, the smartphone industry has been defined by a familiar race. More megapixels. Faster processors. Bigger batteries. Thinner designs. Being first. Being the most. And being the fastest.

The industry rewarded brands that appeared to be chasing specs. Bigger numbers meant progress. At least on paper.

But if you ask Samsung, the days of chasing specs may no longer define the future of Galaxy smartphones.

During a regional roundtable following the launch of the latest Galaxy devices, I asked TM Roh how the company decides when it’s time for a major hardware upgrade if it isn’t simply chasing specs.

His answer revealed how Samsung now approaches the future of its flagship smartphones.

According to Roh, hardware upgrades are increasingly tied to how well they support Galaxy AI.

“To make Galaxy AI run smoothly, it must be backed by strong hardware,” Roh said during the session, speaking through a translator. He added that Samsung develops its hardware, software, and AI capabilities together — and that major upgrades tend to arrive only when the company reaches what he described as the “desired level of excellence.”
(Quotes are approximate translations.)

“To make Galaxy AI run smoothly, it must be backed by strong hardware.”
(Approximate translation from TM Roh during the roundtable)

In short, Samsung says it’s no longer chasing specs for the sake of winning spec-sheet battles. Not anymore.

Samsung CEO TM Roh answering questions at a media roundtable in San Francisco

When hardware stops chasing numbers

Hardware innovation still matters. But Samsung increasingly frames those improvements as tools that enable smarter software experiences.

During the roundtable, Roh pointed to Samsung’s custom application processors, which now include stronger neural processing capabilities designed to handle AI workloads more efficiently. Dedicated hardware is also being introduced to strengthen privacy and security — including technologies embedded directly into the display. (See: Privacy Display)

Even cameras, historically one of the biggest battlegrounds for smartphone innovation, are evolving in the same direction.

Roh noted that while sensors and lenses remain important, modern smartphone photography now relies heavily on AI-powered image processing working alongside the hardware. This could also explain why, as of writing, Samsung has resisted the extra telephoto lens accessories that is prevalent with other brands.

The shift is subtle but important. Instead of emphasizing bigger numbers on spec sheets, Samsung positions hardware upgrades as part of a broader system designed to support intelligent software.

Why Samsung gets dunked on online

That philosophy, however, exists in tension with how smartphones are often discussed online.

In a landscape driven by benchmark charts and viral comparisons, incremental refinement rarely generates the same excitement as dramatic hardware leaps. Over the past few years, the Galaxy S series has occasionally become an easy target for criticism — especially as rival Android manufacturers compete to deliver the biggest numbers, the fastest charging speeds, or the thinnest designs.

The temptation in tech media, particularly on platforms like YouTube, is often to dunk on Samsung rather than examine the nuance behind its approach. Spectacular upgrades and dramatic spec sheets make better thumbnails.

Yet listening to Samsung executives across multiple briefings reveals something interesting: the messaging is remarkably consistent. Whether discussing cameras, processors, or ecosystem features, the company repeatedly returns to the same principle. Hardware innovation matters most when it unlocks a better overall experience.

A company that knows its role

That consistency suggests Samsung knows exactly who it is in the smartphone industry.

As the largest Android smartphone manufacturer globally, Samsung occupies a position where competitors often measure themselves against it. Many brands differentiate by pushing aggressive specifications or experimenting with bold hardware changes.

In many ways, everyone else is punching up.

Scale changes priorities. When you’re building devices for hundreds of millions of users, the focus shifts toward reliability, ecosystem integration, and increasingly, AI-powered experiences that work consistently across products.

Why Southeast Asia matters in Samsung’s AI strategy

During the roundtable, Roh also emphasized the importance of Southeast Asia and Oceania to Samsung’s AI strategy.

According to the company’s internal research, the region ranks among the most receptive markets for AI-powered mobile features. Younger demographics and heavy social media usage are driving adoption.

In markets where smartphones are central to communication, content creation, and digital services, AI-powered tools — from translation features to image editing — have found strong traction.

That context helps explain why Samsung continues to position AI as the defining layer of its next-generation devices.

Is the smartphone spec race ending?

For years, smartphone makers built their identities around chasing specs.

Bigger numbers meant better phones. Faster chips meant progress.

Samsung, it seems, is chasing something else.

Whether that bet ultimately reshapes the smartphone experience remains to be seen. But if Roh’s comments are any indication, the next major leap in Galaxy hardware won’t happen simply because the numbers can go higher.

It will happen when Samsung believes the experience — not the spec sheet — is ready to move forward.

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Hands-On

OPPO Reno15 F 5G hands-on

More question marks than exclamation points?

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The OPPO Reno15 Series 5G made its way to the Philippines last month, and reception has been pretty great so far.

With a powerful camera package, AI, and a slew of upgrades, there’s a lot to love and not much negative to say. But that’s with both the standard and Pro models.

On the other hand, with the Reno15 F 5G — the series’ supposed budget-friendly “lite” variant —there were more question marks than exclamation points.

I attack this piece once more from a consumer standpoint: shelling out PhP 23,000 to PhP 26,000 for a midrange smartphone that feels and performs like it’s a few notches below its segment doesn’t sound too pleasant.

Performance

With a Snapdragon 6 Gen 1 processor, the OPPO Reno15 F performs pretty much like any sub PhP 20,000 mid-ranger. It’s acceptable, but does not punch above its weight as expected.

No major hiccups for light and casual usage. But performance struggles a lot for demanding video games.

It also heats up significantly just 10 minutes into a title like Honkai: Star Rail. This is a stark contrast to the marketed 25℃ and up to 10 hours straight of smooth gameplay.

Although, the experience was still enjoyable with several wins and MVP runs in Call of Duty Mobile. It only means the F variant remains a more camera-centric phone rather than an a hard-hitting all-arounder.

As with other devices, the 7000mAh battery with 80W SUPERVOOC is a strong suit. You’re fueled from dawn ’til dusk, with much to spare. Recharging takes a breeze, too.

Display

The OPPO Reno15 F has a 6.57-inch 120Hz display, with a 92.8% screen-to-body ratio. At least, that allows you to focus on content on the screen.

Content leans more towards the cooler tone, so you’ll have to adjust it manually if you want a warmer or more vivid look.

The 397ppi pixel density is fine to ensure sharper visuals, while the 1400 nits peak brightness is helpful outdoors.

Camera

The device’s 50MP main camera captures decent quality. The color science leans on being natural anew, without being too dull nor washed out. You can pull off smooth portraits too.

I hardly used the phone for stills as I focused on videos, but here are some samples, on the occasions I was able to take the handset with me:

The 50MP front camera is an intriguing add-on, as it is capable of up to 4K video and a wide 100° field of view.

What this does is it essentially removes the need to flip your phone for the popular “0.5” shots. And the quality doesn’t get compromised given the pixel count.

Here are some selfies from different focal lengths:

To its credit, filming with the back camera at 60fps does look and feel smooth, although it can be improved.

Same with the front camera; and the zoom range can be switched from 0.6 to 2x without cutting the recording.

Although, it’s still best to use a selfie stick or small tripod if you’re just after talking head videos.

Speaking of which, here are a few I’ve made with just this device:

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♬ Kìa Bóng Dáng Ai – Pháo

@manilaconnoisseur

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♬ original sound – Manila Connoisseur – Manila Connoisseur

But for travel and on-the-go captures, as OPPO markets for the series in general, even the Reno15 F can cover a lot of background along with your or your groups’ faces.

Make no mistake, there are some useful AI editing features here. In particular, AI Portrait Glow gives your raw capture an effect to make it look it was taken with flash.

I do not recall the device heating up as well when taking many photos or videos, so you can say it’s more optimized for that task rather than gaming.

Connectivity issues

Meanwhile, AI LinkBoost 3.0, as in the case of the OPPO A6 Pro, doesn’t seem to punch above its weight either.

Once, I also played Mobile Legends: Bang Bang and the session opened to a jittery start despite being on Wi-Fi and having a stable connection. I don’t know what triggered this.

Design, feel

We got the Aurora Blue variant which does kind of resemble the northern lights when you tilt the phone a certain way and when light hits its back panel.

The cursive “Reno” on the large, protruding camera island gives it more style.

However, it’s all just aesthetics. On the downside, the phone is all sorts of slippery.

I couldn’t hold it properly without think of it slipping away from my hands; nor could I put it on my lap with confidence.

So I guess it’s good that it has structural integrity and waterproofing, because you’ll need that.

oplus_16

The 6.57-inch body does have a good balance between being too compact and too large, like ultras and pro maxes.

It has a squarish body and has already adapted to the premium, aluminum frame look from the sides.

Is this your GadgetMatch?

Sadly, the OPPO Reno15 F 5G is a Swipe Left unlike its bigger, more capable siblings. There are plenty of plus points for the camera package but take that away, and I don’t see much difference between the Reno15 F and something like the A6 Pro.

Granted, the asking price of this phone will drop significantly in a few months. But throw in a little more, and you’ve got a legitimate mid-ranger that’s more on the premium side rather than the cheap end of the spectrum.

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