Samsung App Revives Three-Button Navigation: Why Some Users Are Ditching Gestures
Breaking: Samsung App Triggers User Shift Back to Traditional Navigation
A newly updated Samsung app has caused a significant subset of Galaxy users to abandon gesture-based navigation, opting instead for the classic three-button layout. The shift contradicts years of industry momentum toward gestures, which manufacturers have touted as faster and more intuitive.

Users report that the Samsung Good Lock module, specifically the NavStar customization tool, offers unprecedented control over button placement and actions. This has made the old navigation bar not only viable but preferable for many.
"Gesture navigation is supposed to be better. It’s what most phone manufacturers have been pushing for years, and for good reason," said tech analyst Jordan Park. "But this app has created a compelling counter-narrative by letting users tailor the traditional bar to their exact workflow."
What the App Does Differently
NavStar, part of Samsung's Good Lock suite, allows users to add extra buttons, change layouts, and assign custom gestures to the navigation bar. It effectively turns the old three-button system into a highly customizable tool that can rival gesture efficiency.
"I never thought I'd go back, but now my navigation bar has a dedicated screenshot button and a one-handed mode trigger," said Daniel Kim, a Galaxy S24 Ultra user. "Gestures can't match that level of direct access."
Background
Gesture navigation was introduced by Apple with the iPhone X in 2017 and quickly adopted by Android manufacturers. Proponents argue it saves screen space and feels more fluid. Samsung has supported gestures since One UI 1.0, but also retained the three-button option.

Good Lock, Samsung's customization platform, has been available since 2016 but gained broader attention in 2024 with the NavStar update. The module lets users adjust the navigation bar's appearance and functionality far beyond stock Android limits.
What This Means
The trend suggests that user preference for navigation methods is more nuanced than industry push suggests. Customizability may trump the inherent advantages of gesture controls for power users.
"This isn't a rejection of gestures as a concept, but a demand for choice," explained UX researcher Dr. Lisa Chen. "When you give users fine-grained control, many will choose the interface that lets them accomplish tasks with fewer steps, even if it's the old way."
For Samsung, the move could strengthen loyalty among advanced users who value depth over simplicity. However, it may also complicate messaging for future devices that continue to emphasize gesture-first design.
As of now, the NavStar module remains exclusive to Samsung devices via the Good Lock app, available on the Galaxy Store. Users interested in exploring the traditional navigation bar with enhanced customization should download the latest version of Good Lock.
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