
Samsung is shaking things up on your living room wall β quite literally. The tech giant has quietly rolled out an update that swaps out Microsoft OneDrive integration for Google Photos on its 2021 QLED TVs, specifically in the Magic Screen feature. The change, announced via the SmartThings app, was pushed in June 2025 and affects models that supported the now-aging-but-still-pretty-nifty Magic Screen functionality.
Magic Screen, first introduced in 2018, was Samsungβs way of making TVs look artsy when not in use β displaying paintings, photos, or other pretty visuals instead of that big, boring black rectangle. For users who didnβt want to fuss with USB sticks, OneDrive integration was a godsend: upload your photos to the cloud, and voilΓ , your TV becomes a personal gallery.
But as of this writing, those OneDrive-powered displays are being handed over to Google Photos. Samsung hasnβt explained the decision, and we donβt expect them to β but the implications are clear: users who had their personal moments lovingly stored in Microsoftβs cloud are now being asked to hop over to Googleβs ecosystem to keep the slideshow going.

For some, like myself, this change feels more βfinally!β than βwhy though?β Iβve never owned a Samsung TV β Iβm firmly on Team TCL with a Chromecast with Google TV dangling at the back. That setup has always let me beam photos from my Google Photos library straight to the screen. No extra steps, no third-party workarounds. So when Samsung says they’re adding Google Photos? I get it. They’re catching up.
But the problem isnβt the addition of Google Photos. Itβs the removal of OneDrive. Why not just keep both? Let users decide what cloud service they want to use. Itβs not like they take up shelf space. Sure, Samsung and Microsoft have been close collaborators β Galaxy phones come bundled with a bunch of Microsoft services. But now, it seems Googleβs media platform is getting the nod, perhaps because more people use it for photo backup anyway.
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One big caveat: this change only affects older 2021 QLED TVs that still have Magic Screen. Samsung stopped including this feature in newer TVs years ago, so if you’ve recently bought a Samsung TV and you’re wondering where your photo frame mode went… it never came with it.
So, what now? If youβre one of the users affected by this switch, youβll need to move your treasured OneDrive albums over to Google Photos to keep your TV gallery alive. Not ideal, but at least youβre not entirely left in the dark.
Still, this feels like a missed opportunity for inclusivity. More options should mean more freedom β not picking sides. But hey, we donβt make the rules. We just report when they change.





