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FindArticles > News > Technology

Material 3 Expressive arrives on Pixel 6 and newer

Bill Thompson
Last updated: September 10, 2025 1:46 pm
By Bill Thompson
Technology
6 Min Read
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Google<\/g> is bringing the chaos of Material 3 Expressive<\/g> to Pixel 6 and newer devices, as well as Pixel Tablet<\/g>, with a bundle of updates to fine-tune audio, navigation, sharing, and on-device creativity.

The expanded formulation adds to Google’s design-guided personalization push on Android, while layering on useful quality-of-life additions across the company’s entire Pixel range.

Table of Contents
  • Material You goes bolder with Expressive
  • Pixel Buds Pro 2 get Adaptive Audio, head gestures
  • On‑wrist Maps navigation for Pixel Watch
  • Gboard now packs on‑device AI writing tools
  • Dual‑listener and broadcast audio with LE Audio
  • Faster, clearer sharing on Android
  • Androidify recruits Gemini and Imagen for custom bots
  • Why this rollout matters
Android Material 3 Expressive UI on Google Pixel 6

Material You goes bolder with Expressive

Material 3 Expressive extends Material You’s dynamic color system to motion, animated lock screen “Live effects” and personalized contact “calling cards.” The result is a UI that no longer seems quite as static, and one with infinitely more persona, all without spoiling the sense of consistency found in Android. Google’s design team has long contended that personalization fosters engagement; this update pushes that thesis forward from wallpapers to the surfaces you look down at many times each day.

For developers, Expressive’s broader colour palette harmonisation and motion avatars discourage more bespoke assets, and encourage system-driven styling that still feels branded. The Material Design guidelines stress adaptive palettes and elevation-aware animations — Expressive leans in to both of those, which ought to help third‑party apps look native on Pixels from the get go.

Pixel Buds Pro 2 get Adaptive Audio, head gestures

Adaptive Sound for Pixel Buds Pro 2 seamlessly mixes active noise cancellation and transparency according to your environment so you can hear voices and hazards while keeping music clear. And it adds head‑gesture controls: nod to pick up a call, shake to reject. Google says the headphones will keep your chats with Gemini intelligible even in noisy locations — a helpful edge for commuters and gym-rats both.

Context-aware audio is rapidly becoming table stakes in top earbuds, and competitors are leaning on environmental sensing and beamforming, as well. The distinction here is that it’s even more deeply integrated with Android’s system intelligence and offers Assistant-like interactions without you having to reach for your phone.

On‑wrist Maps navigation for Pixel Watch

Begin a walk or bike ride navigation on your phone and it now seamlessly hands off to your Pixel Watch. It’s a minor tweak that makes a huge difference: by shifting our gaze to our wrist for turn-by-turn directions, we minimize the chances that we’ll miss the right turn, or have to consciously shut our phone off and cram it back into our pocket. For wearables researchers, “glanceability” is a consistent finding: Users complete a task faster and more safely when they can take their eyes off it; it’s the principle applied to your everyday mapping.

Gboard now packs on‑device AI writing tools

Gboard’s new writing tools allow tone to be adjusted — more formal, expressive or concise — and spelling and grammar to be corrected on the fly. According to Google, proofreading and rewriting occur on your device, and drafts remain private. That chimes with the industry’s shift toward edge AI for privacy-sensitive inputs, a direction Android’s on-device model strategy also reflects.

In other words, this turns Gboard into a lightweight email and messaging and social post editor. For those enterprises that have concerns about cloud processing, on-device inference not only de-risks but also accelerates reaction times.

Material You Dynamic color UI comes to the Pixel 6 in update Material 3 Expressive update on Pixel 6 and newer with dynamic color UI Read Source Site

Dual‑listener and broadcast audio with LE Audio

Android also can pair two low‑energy (LE) Audio Bluetooth headphones to a single phone, allowing two people to listen simultaneously, a useful new development for flights, trains or late‑night movie viewing. You may also spin up a private broadcast using a QR code and invite a group of people to join you and listen in sync, each at their choice of volume.

This depends on the Bluetooth SIG’s LE Audio stack, which does Auracast‑style broadcasting though. Industry groups have touted Auracast as a model for quiet gyms, museum tours and airport gate announcements. Extending those powers to personal devices broadens the ecosystem and reduces friction for listening together.

Faster, clearer sharing on Android

Quick Share is redesigned for flow — Switch between sending and receiving easier, preview photos before sending, open received files right away, and view a live progress indicator during transfer.

The tweaks in the updates aren’t headline grabbers, but they shave seconds off a task people perform often — just the kind of polish that keeps users working inside the default workflow.

Androidify recruits Gemini and Imagen for custom bots

Androidify is back as a creative sandbox. Assemble your own Android bot by uploading a selfie or entering a prompt. Gemini 2.5 Flash captions this photo, Imagen creates the character, and in some instances, Veo 3 animates it, Google says. It’s essentially a showcase for Google’s generative stack, but also serves as a lightweight identity tool for messaging and profiles.

Why this rollout matters

Starting with Pixel 6 and beyond, Google is going after the heart of its installed base. Analyst estimates have suggested that pixel shipments exceeded 10 million in one recent year – a big number of potential beneficiaries in a hurry. Most importantly, these updates weave design, AI, and hardware together: Expressive personalizes the surface, on-device models fuel writing and voice and LE Audio extends experiences to friends and groups.

For developers, more closely aligning with Material 3 and LE Audio features will mean less customization work and access to new use cases—like shared audio experiences or more consistent theming. For people, the throughline is obvious: less friction, more personality and smarter help that stays closer to the device in your pocket.

Bill Thompson
ByBill Thompson
Bill Thompson is a veteran technology columnist and digital culture analyst with decades of experience reporting on the intersection of media, society, and the internet. His commentary has been featured across major publications and global broadcasters. Known for exploring the social impact of digital transformation, Bill writes with a focus on ethics, innovation, and the future of information.
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