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Magic Cue, one of the smartest Android features on the Pixel phones, is coming to more apps

Google's most underused Pixel 10 feature is finally getting the third-party reach and redesign it needed to become the proactive AI assistant it was always supposed to be.

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Magic Cue Settings splash screen on the Google Pixel 10 Pro in Obsidian
Nirave Gondhia / Digital Trends
Sundar Pichai stands in front of a Google logo at Google I/O 2021.
This story is part of our complete Google I/O coverage

Magic Cue, I’d say, was the kind of feature that made me excited about the Pixel 10 launch. However, after the on-stage demo, the feature hardly showed up in day-to-day usage, much less in a useful way.  

Google apparently noticed. At I/O 2026, the company quietly announced that the feature is getting an expansion, along with a possible redesign. While it wasn’t the headline announcement, it could surely be something that makes Pixel 10 users excited again. 

What is Magic Cue doing differently now?

The core idea behind the feature hasn’t changed. It runs entirely on-device, reads context from your app usage, and surfaces relevant information (as a prediction) before you even look for it. What’s new, however, is that the feature is breaking out of Google’s own app ecosystem. 

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For now, Snapchat is the first third-party integration, with Google strongly implying that more apps are in the pipeline. Even though this is a good sign, neither of the companies has shared a rollout timeline. 

Separately, 9to5Google previously spotted Magic Cue’s integration in Google Wallet and Google Tasks, which would make the feature substantially more helpful on a day-to-day basis. Imagine boarding passes surfacing at the right moment rather than demanding a separate app check.

Does the redesign actually matter?

Yes, it does. Previously, Magic Cue suggestions appeared inside whichever app you were using; the feature only worked in apps that supported it. That locked out most third-party keyboards completely.

The new design changes that. Magic Cue suggestions will surface in a small bar that floats at the bottom of the screen, outside any app’s interface, like how Gemini assistant and Circle to Search show up on Android phones.

Because it now operates at the system level, it should work irrespective of which app or keyboard you are using, which is something that users have been asking since launch. Google hasn’t confirmed this directly, but it is the most likely outcome of the repositioning.

To me, this sounds like a promising update to a feature that arrived with a great promise, but ended up underdelivering.

Shikhar Mehrotra
For more than five years, Shikhar has consistently simplified developments in the field of consumer tech and presented them…
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