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03-29-2021 05:45 PM in
Galaxy SHigh refresh rate displays have become a core part of our smartphone experience. Once reserved for premium, top-tier smartphones, this display property can now be found on a wide range of budget and mid-range smartphones. Like other phone manufacturers, Samsung too had restricted the high refresh rate panel for its top-shelf offerings such as the Galaxy S20 series, Galaxy Note 20 series, Galaxy Fold 2, and Galaxy Tab S7. But that finally changed this year when we saw Samsung finally democratizing the high refresh rate tech and bringing it to the cheaper models such as the Galaxy A52, Galaxy A32, and Galaxy M12.
Luckily for Samsung Galaxy owners, XDA Senior Member tribalfs have come up with a handy app called Galaxy Max Hz that allows them to fine-tune the screen refresh rate to their liking while also making it easier to switch between different modes on the go.
Here’s what you can do with the Galaxy Max Hz app:
- Control the max refresh rate and force a hidden 96Hz mode (on supported devices)
- Add a Quick Settings tile for switching between various refresh rates on the go
- Bypass the adaptive refresh rate and lock the refresh rate to the maximum or any other value supported by your device
- See the display refresh rate in real-time using the Refresh Rate Monitor
- Quickly change between different display resolutions using the quick setting tile
- Enable experimental adaptive refresh rate mode on devices that don’t natively support Samsung’s “Adaptive Motion Smoothness” technology (e.g., Galaxy S20, Galaxy S20+, Galaxy A52, Galaxy A72, etc.)
- Set minimum refresh rate value for the adaptive mode to 60Hz or lower
- Force the lowest refresh rate when the screen is off (Overriding Samsung’s default behavior which locks the display to its maximum refresh rate when the screen goes off)
