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Bixby’s big comeback starts with One UI 8.5

Instead of rigid voice commands, Bixby now interprets your intent and responds with actions and suggestions that match how you actually use your phone.

By
Shubham Sawarkar
Shubham Sawarkar's avatar
ByShubham Sawarkar
Editor-in-Chief
I’m a tech enthusiast who loves exploring gadgets, trends, and innovations. With certifications in CISCO Routing & Switching and Windows Server Administration, I bring a sharp...
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Feb 20, 2026, 12:20 PM EST
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Samsung Bixby logo.
Image: Samsung
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Samsung is finally doing what many Galaxy users have been quietly hoping for: turning Bixby from a stiff, command-driven assistant into something closer to a conversational device agent that actually understands how you talk – and, crucially, how your phone works behind the scenes. With the rollout tied to the One UI 8.5 beta, this isn’t just a cosmetic refresh but a fundamental reboot of how Bixby listens, reasons and acts across Galaxy devices.

At the heart of the upgrade is a simple idea: you should be able to talk to your phone the way you’d talk to a friend who’s good with tech, instead of memorising the exact name of every setting buried three layers deep in the Settings app. So instead of hunting for “Keep screen on while viewing,” you can say something like, “I don’t want the screen to time out while I’m still looking at it,” and Bixby will flip the right toggle for you. The same goes for troubleshooting: if you complain, “Why is my phone screen always on when it’s in my pocket?” Bixby doesn’t just shrug and show you a help page — it surfaces contextually relevant settings like Accidental Touch Protection and lets you fix the problem in a couple of taps.

This is where the “conversational device agent” label actually matters. Instead of being a glorified voice shortcut launcher, Bixby now analyzes your intent, checks the state of your device and proposes actions, almost like a built-in tech support rep that already knows your phone’s configuration. That makes a real difference in 2026, when modern phones are overflowing with smart features that most people never touch because they’re hard to find or understand. Samsung’s pitch is that you no longer need to remember whether a feature is under Display, Advanced features or Labs — you just describe the situation, and Bixby handles the mapping from human language to system settings.

Samsung Bixby
GIF: Samsung

The other big pillar of the reboot is Bixby’s new relationship with the web, which quietly drags it into the same conversation as Siri, Alexa, Google Assistant and the latest wave of AI answer engines. Bixby can now access live, real-time information from the open web and show answers directly inside its own interface, without kicking you out to a browser. Ask it for something like “Find me hotels in Seoul that have swimming pools for kids,” and you get relevant results inline, with the context of your request preserved instead of being dumped into a generic search results page. That move is part of a broader pattern: Samsung had already started redefining Bixby as an AI search layer on its 2025 TVs, where viewers could ask about actors, shows or topics and get answers on-screen without leaving what they were watching.

Samsung Bixby
GIF: Samsung

There’s also an interesting strategic subtext: Bixby’s upgraded web brain doesn’t exist in a vacuum. Reporting and commentary around the launch highlight that Samsung is leaning on deeper integrations with AI search players, including Perplexity, to handle real-time, up-to-date answers. For users, that translates into something very practical: Bixby is no longer limited to a static knowledge base or whatever canned responses shipped with your phone months ago; it can tap into current information and synthesize it on the fly, which is increasingly the baseline expectation for any assistant that claims to be “AI-powered.”

All of this is rolling out first as part of the One UI 8.5 beta, and Samsung is treating it as a phased launch rather than a flip-the-switch global release. Initially, the new Bixby experience is available in select markets — including the U.S., UK, Germany, India, Korea and Poland — with wider expansion promised later. Language support still follows the existing Bixby footprint: a set of major languages and regions, with Samsung explicitly warning that accents, dialects and environmental noise can affect recognition quality. And for features that rely on location, like highly local web answers, the company stresses that location access is consent-based and that data is deleted immediately after a response is generated.

Zoom out and the timing is no coincidence. Samsung is heading into its next Unpacked event promising a “new phase in the era of AI” and phones that are “truly personal and adaptive,” and Bixby’s reinvention is a key part of making that claim feel real rather than just a tagline. In a world where every major player is racing to ship agents that don’t just answer questions but can actually do things on your behalf, Samsung is positioning Bixby as the Galaxy-specific layer that knows your device inside out, understands your messy, natural language and can bridge the gap between generative AI in the cloud and the everyday knobs and switches on your phone.

Whether that’s enough to shake off Bixby’s old reputation is still an open question, but the direction is clear: less “voice assistant you forgot existed,” more always-available AI sidekick that can change settings, fix annoyances and pull in fresh information without making you think about which app to open. For Galaxy users, especially those who’ve ever rage-searched through Settings trying to stop the screen from dimming or figure out why notifications are muted, this new conversational Bixby might be the most useful kind of AI upgrade — the kind that quietly makes your phone feel smarter, more responsive and a little more on your side.


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