Samsung has started rolling out a new update for Nice Shot, the Good Lock module used for screenshots and screen recording on Galaxy devices. The release does not add new features, but it does focus on fixes that may matter more to regular users than a longer feature list.
The latest version is Nice Shot 2.3.09. For Galaxy owners who have noticed visual glitches, interface issues, or general instability, this update is a maintenance release worth installing.
What Samsung says was fixed
According to the changelog, Samsung has concentrated on three areas: system stability and performance, a language display issue in Korean mode, and user interface bugs. The company did not specify every visual problem that was resolved.
That limited detail suggests the update is aimed at improving the everyday reliability of the module rather than changing how it works. For a utility built around quick access, those small corrections can make the experience feel smoother right away.
Why Nice Shot matters inside Good Lock
Nice Shot is one of the more focused modules in the Good Lock ecosystem. Instead of broad customization, it is designed to refine the screenshot and screen recording process on Galaxy phones and tablets.
One of its better-known additions is a delete button in the screenshot toolbar, which gives users a faster way to manage captured images without opening the gallery first. It is a small change, but one that can save time in daily use.
Because Nice Shot is usually used briefly and then left running in the background, stability matters a great deal. Any bug that interrupts the screenshot flow can be more noticeable than it would be in a larger app with more visible features.
Part of a broader Good Lock expansion
Nice Shot sits within Good Lock, Samsung’s long-running customization platform for Galaxy devices. The suite includes modules that range from small convenience tweaks to deeper personalization options.
Good Lock is now easier to access than before. After being limited to certain regions in the past, it has been available globally since early last year, giving more Galaxy users the chance to install Samsung’s official add-on modules.
The main app can be downloaded through Galaxy Store or Google Play, and the modules are then installed separately based on what each user needs. That modular approach lets users add only the tools they actually want, including Nice Shot for capture-related improvements.
For most users, this update may feel modest at first glance. Still, releases like Nice Shot 2.3.09 are often the ones that keep a small utility dependable, especially when its job is to work quickly and quietly in the background.
