Google is trialing a streamlined Gemini overlay on Android that tucks several one-tap contextual actions behind a Plus menu, trading visual simplicity for extra taps. Early code references inside the latest Google app build suggest a quieter UI that could make the assistant feel more polished — but at the risk of hiding some of its most helpful quick actions.
What Is Changing in the Gemini Overlay UI
In code spotted within the Google app v17.4.66, the Gemini overlay’s contextual shortcuts — such as Ask about place in Maps, Ask about PDF in Drive or Files, and Ask about page in Chrome — are being moved into the Plus menu. The prominent Share screen with Live button, which enabled on-the-fly screen sharing without opening Gemini Live first, is also headed for that menu. A new Screen content entry appears in the same menu, seemingly replacing the current Ask about screen trigger.

Separately, Share conversation — currently nested in a dropdown next to the chat title — may shift to the top-right corner of the main conversation UI, which could make sharing links more discoverable in the chat view. None of these changes are live yet; they appear to be gated behind server-side flags, indicative of a controlled A/B test.
Why a Cleaner UI May Reduce Usability on Mobile
Streamlining is appealing on paper, but mobile usability often hinges on surfacing the right action at the right moment. UX research from groups like Nielsen Norman Group has long warned that burying key actions in secondary menus reduces discoverability and increases task time. Google’s own Material Design guidance advises that frequent, high-value actions should be visible without navigation.
For example, when viewing a restaurant in Maps, Ask about place has been a single-tap bridge from what’s on screen to a conversational follow-up. Relocating it behind a Plus menu introduces an extra step and a decision point. Casual users may assume the capability disappeared, while power users will simply work more slowly. The same friction applies to screen sharing, a feature many rely on to troubleshoot or co-browse with Gemini Live.
The Agentic AI Rationale Behind the Cleanup
There is a plausible strategy behind the cleanup. Google has been signaling more “agentic” behaviors for Gemini on Android — assistants that understand context, take action across apps, and anticipate intent. If Gemini gets better at reading what’s on screen and initiating relevant steps automatically, manual shortcuts like Ask about page may feel redundant, and a calmer overlay becomes an asset rather than a hindrance.

Clues in the same app build point to broader groundwork: a Map area button in the attachment sheet and an experimental Characters feature suggest Google is widening the assistant’s role beyond basic Q&A. In that future, the overlay could serve as a subtle control layer while Gemini drives more of the flow — but until those agentic abilities are reliable, users will notice the extra taps.
Signals Of A Larger Mobile Assistant Strategy
Moving Share conversation to a dedicated top-right button mirrors patterns common in modern chat apps, where sharing is treated as a first-class action. It aligns with Google’s broader Material You approach — less clutter on the canvas, clearer affordances in consistent locations — even as it consolidates other tools behind menus.
Google frequently runs server-side experiments before shipping interface changes widely. Past assistant updates have rolled out incrementally, with UI tweaks arriving first, followed by capability upgrades that justify the redesign. This round looks similar: a visual simplification that anticipates smarter, more proactive behaviors to come.
What Users Should Watch for in Gemini on Android
Because these changes are not yet public, Google could still adjust the design — for instance, restoring a small set of persistent shortcuts for high-frequency cases while keeping the Plus menu for everything else. If the company leans into agentic flows, expect onboarding prompts or chips that surface context-aware suggestions to offset the loss of always-visible buttons.
Power users and enterprise teams who rely on screen sharing and document-aware prompts should watch for onboarding hints, tutorials, or settings toggles that preserve quick access. The best outcome is a cleaner overlay that doesn’t force users to relearn muscle memory — and a smarter Gemini that makes manual triggers the exception rather than the rule.
