Google has officially launched Android 16, marking its earliest major release in years. It’s now available for Pixel 8 and newer devices, while others will wait a few months. On paper, Android 16 promises smarter notifications, improved tablet multitasking, better security, and accessibility upgrades. Sounds good, right? Well… if only it felt like a genuine leap forward.

Let’s be real — if you’ve been running Android 15, you’ll probably struggle to spot any meaningful differences here. The so-called “smarter notifications” and desktop-like tablet features sound impressive in Google’s blog post, but in practice? It’s basically the same experience. No Material You 3 Expressive. No real standout visual or functional change that makes you say “Okay, this is Android 16.” I’ve tried it, and honestly, it feels like Android 15 with a patch and a slightly tweaked changelog.

Security upgrades like the new Advanced Protection suite are welcome, no doubt — but those should be standard, not the headline features of a whole new OS version. The same goes for improved hearing aid support and HDR screenshots. While inclusivity matters, this feels more like a mid-cycle update than a generational leap.
Maybe I’m being harsh, but when Apple dropped iOS 26 two days ago with visible improvements and fresh features, it made Android 16’s arrival feel underwhelming. If this is the pace Google wants to set for Android’s evolution, I’m not convinced. Here’s hoping the next Pixel Feature Drop brings something that actually feels… new.
