The latest Samsung One UI 5 beta is losing a useful feature
Samsung has beentesting One UI 5 beta on the Galaxy S22 seriessince early August. The company has been slow in rolling out new beta builds as it looks to fix all the reported bugs and issues. A couple of weeks after dropping thethird One UI 5 beta with improved animations and new app icons, the Korean giant has released the fourth beta firmware for the Galaxy S22 lineup. And this time around, it has pulled a key feature from the build: multi-user support.
The feature has been removed altogether and won’t be restored in a future beta release. Samsung says it decided to nix the multi-user functionality due to “several issues.” On the bright side, the ZVJ2 One UI 5 beta for the Galaxy S22 series packs plenty of bug fixes. There are fixes for crashes that occurred when changing the wallpaper, using the Air Command functionality of the S Pen, or when entering an App folder. Object Eraser, which broke in the previous beta, is also working.

The build is not exactly entirely free of bugs, though. Turning the phone’s display off while using DeX will show a black screen on the connected external monitor. You will also run into issues while trying to open any file received through Quick Share, though the file is saved normally.
TheAndroid 13-based One UI 5 beta 4 build for the Galaxy S22 lineup is already live in the US, India, and Europe. Navigate toSettings > Software Update > Downloadand install to grab the latest firmware. Rumors indicate Samsung was looking torelease One UI 5’s stable build to the public by mid-October. But given the lingering bugs that are still present in the latest beta, it seems unlikely that the update will be out before the month’s end. Until then, check outeverything new in One UI 5to know about all the new features it’s possible to play around with once the update lands.

Thanks:Moshe!
Pixel 10 Pro XL charges faster wirelessly

From faster storage to better speakers
Google’s made several improvements over the years

Carriers get the upper hand
The note-taking app I should have used all along
![]()
Broader branding hints at wider paid-tier ambitions