Samsung Galaxy Tab S11 Ultra review – Still undefeated in size

TechnologyDigital
8 Oct 2025 • 12:00 PM MYT
Nasi Lemak Tech
Nasi Lemak Tech

Malaysian tech reviews, unboxings, and guides. Simplifying tech for you.

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Take a look at this brand new Samsung Galaxy Tab S11 Ultra. While it looks basically the same as the previous generations of Ultra tablets from Samsung, there are actually a lot of tiny differences. Most of them are for the better, except for one.

I have the Galaxy Tab S9 Ultra with me here to compare – and I highly suggest you watch this video instead as many things can only be shown in a video.

Design

The design of the new Galaxy Tab S11 Ultra. It has the exact same design and has the same length and height – but ever so slightly thinner than the previous generations. It’s quite mind-boggling that this super-thin tablet can still be thinner.

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Let’s take a look at the buttons. Remember how our phones will have the volume rocker at the top and the power button below it? Yeah, that wasn’t what we had on all previous generations of the tablets. The Tab S9 Ultra has the power button above the volume rocker instead.

Now, Samsung inverted it back to the Tab S11 Ultra. That’s great, and I don’t have to do any mental gymnastics when I want to use this tablet in portrait mode to watch brainrot on TikTok or Instagram. Yeah, watching it on such a humongous OLED screen is a very different experience.

Screen

Let’s now talk about the screen. It’s still using a humongous 14.6-inch Dynamic AMOLED 2X display with a resolution of 2960×1848 pixels and goes up to 120Hz refresh rate.

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Now, what I’m showing here isn’t the highest brightness, but it’s already super bright and managed to overcome the bright studio lights. Our colorimeter did report that the Tab S11 Ultra can only go up to around 980 nits in auto brightness mode.

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You see, the anti-reflection tech built into the Tab S11 Ultra is superbly good. The super bright lights create a purplish hue but that’s about it.

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Also, the nits brightness is actually candela per meter square. It’s the brightess level per square meter. Since this is such a big tablet screen, 980 nits is plenty bright.

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The color accuracy is actually realy good too. With the default out of the box settings at vividness level 1, it covers 100% sRGB and 91.53% of DCI-P3 color gamuts.

When we went into the settings menu and cranked it up to vividness level 3, it basically reached 100% of both color gamuts. As a quick recap, having a higher DCI-P3 color gamut coverage is going to have more saturated colors. Just head into the settings menu and play with this slider – and you can tune it to whichever vividness level that’s comfortable to you.

The bezel here is actually quite tiny, and it’s very difficult to hold with my hands. I guess that’s understandable since this tablet is mostly meant to be placed on a table with a standing case.

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One thing that’s never going to be comfortable – is the under-display fingerprint scanner. I never liked under-display fingerprint scanners and it is even worse on tablets as it’s just not ergonomic to use at all. I would’ve much preferred the fingerprint scanner to be embedded on the power button.

The notch

Now, that notch is… welcome to 2019, I guess? We now have a waterdrop notch on the Tab S11 Ultra instead of a rectangular notch. Even though it has been reduced from 2 selfie cameras to one, the waterdrop notch is still quite big, in my opinion.

It would’ve been the best to not have a notch at all, honestly speaking.

Performance

Now, as for the performance – the Galaxy Tab S11 Ultra is powered by the MediaTek Dimensity 9400+. I’m rather disappointed as I bleieve Samsung should have waited for a while and used the newly-announced Dimensity 9500 instead. Anyway, this is actually my third time encountering this chipset.

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We’ve done an extensive gaming test for the Galaxy Tab S11 Ultra, so watch that video here.

The Dimensity 9400+ is supremely powerful. We can play Genshin Impact at the highest graphical settings at 60fps without issues at all, and that is actually to be expected since the Xiaomi 15T Pro and the Xiaomi Pad Mini, both also equipped with the Dimensity 9400+, can achieve this too.

Now, Zenless Zone Zero is much more demanding and rendering at the native resolution too. With the flower boss fight, it ran somewhere around 50fps, and the frame rate was actually very consistent. I also did Shiyu Defense from nodes 4 to 7 and have no issues at all – other than my own skill issue. It’s actually a very enjoyable experience since this is such a humongous, beautiful, OLED screen.

Wuthering Waves is going to be the most demanding game to date as it is going to run at the native resolution with a lot more fancier graphics and effects. While it was okay in certain areas, but these nests are super demanding to the point that it drops to around 20fps. That’s because the Dimensity 9400+ has already hit its limit – and we’ll have to wait for the next generation of chipsets to get a better frame rate at this render resolution with this graphical quality.

This tablet will also practically be 99% impossible to thermal throttle because the entire tablet is a giant heatsink. Throughout our gaming test, it cannot even reach 35°C.

I have also tested Destiny Rising, which is surprisingly not demanding at all. Fortnite also ran okay, though there are some microstutters here and there, but otherwise smooth.

Speakers

One thing that I want to highlight is how great the speakers sound. Even for such a thin tablet, it has 4 speakers and it sounds supremely good. Have a listen at the video at the top of this review.

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Battery life

How about the battery life then? It lasts for around 11 hours and 39 minutes. That’s actually very good, mostly in thanks to the MediaTek Dimensity 9400+ chipset. You see, when we compared the battery capacity with the Tab S9 Ultra, the new Tab S11 Ultra is only 400mAh more, or 3.57142857% larger battery, yet we tested them with the same brightness.

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I’m just more impressed by the MediaTek Dimensity 9400+ now.

Charging speed

As for the charging speed, the specs says that it supports up to 45W. Using our Ugreen USB-PD PPS charger and the PowerZ KM003C logger, the Tab S11 Ultra can only reach around 40W at most.

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It takes about 90 minutes to charge from 15% to completion, and the temperature is waaaaaaaay down low. It barely reaches 32.5°C, and I think Samsung could push the wattage to around 65W and this tablet can handle it without any issues at all.

Software

Now, the Galaxy Tab S11 Ultra is using One UI 8.0 with Android 16. There are a lot of new features – but there are just a few that I want to highlight.

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There is a new multi-desktop functionality is housed within Samsung DeX. On paper, it should work like macOS or Windows multi-desktop. And it is… kind of. It seems to have two different styles of desktops.

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We start off with the usual Android interface. Then, we can head here and add a desktop. Within this new desktop, all apps are opened as floating windows. We can open more desktops to segregate our work too.

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But… we cannot move the apps from – let’s say desktop 1 to desktop 2. There’s no dragging and dropping, no option to click to move the window, and also no easy keyboard shortcut to change between the desktops.

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We can hit Fn+F5 and use the arrow keys to select whatever desktop we want, then hit the enter key to switch to that desktop. While this is a good idea, the execution is just not good.

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Oh – there’s this new white bar thing at the top of each app while running it on the standard Android interface. If we drag it down, it’ll enter the new multi-desktop interface directly – but it’ll just go to whichever desktop that was previously selected and we cannot move it to a different desktop.

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Other than that, the taskbar works as before – and it’s still the best implementation that we’ve seen so far.

Keyboard

Let’s now talk abotu the keyboard. The typing experience is actually quite okay though the travel distance is short but the keys themselves are rather stiff and responsive. I can also see Samsung trying to minimize the space it takes and the tablet can support itself even if I lift it up like this.