Skip to main content
  1. Home
  2. Phones
  3. News

Google Pixel 11 Pro might not look much different, after all

A 0.9mm case just leaked more about the Pixel 11 Pro than Google has. Spoiler: it might look a lot like the phone you already have.

Add as a preferred source on Google
The back of the Google Pixel 10 Pro XL in Jade
Digital Trends

A case retailer has accidentally become one of the more interesting sources of Google Pixel 11 Pro information this week.

Thinborne, a Texas-based accessories brand known for its ultra-thin aramid fiber cases, has quietly listed a Pixel 11 Pro XL case on its website — and while the case itself is unremarkable, what its camera cutout suggests about the phone’s design is worth talking about.

The case itself isn’t the story

The case is classic Thinborne: 0.9mm thick on the back, 0.6mm on the sides, made from 600D aramid fiber, MagSafe compatible, and bundled with a tempered glass screen protector.

Recommended Videos

Nothing about it screams news story. But the camera cutout is where things get interesting — it lines up closely with the oval camera bar on the current Pixel 10 Pro XL, suggesting the Pixel 11 Pro might be landing with a very similar footprint and camera module layout to its predecessor.

That wouldn’t be entirely out of character for Google — the Pixel 10 Pro’s design was already described as a slight modification of the Pixel 9 Pro, keeping the same flat sides, rounded corners, and oval camera bar.

Google may be sticking with the same design

If the Pixel 11 Pro follows the same pattern, Google is clearly not in a rush to reinvent the look. What it might do — and typically does every generation — is refresh the colour lineup, which tends to be where the design energy goes anyway.

That said, take all of this with a generous pinch of salt. Thinborne is working from unconfirmed information, and the “Pixel 11 Pro XL” name on the listing could just as easily be a placeholder or a wrong product name entirely — case makers sometimes pre-list devices based on little more than educated guesses and supply chain whispers.

Google tends to announce its Pixel flagships in August, and there’s no reason to think 2026 will be any different.

So there’s still a good five months before anything becomes official — plenty of time for more case listings, more leaks, and more reading between very thin lines.

Shikhar Mehrotra
For more than five years, Shikhar has consistently simplified developments in the field of consumer tech and presented them…
Motorola leak reveals the upcoming Razr 70 Ultra, and it doesn’t want to change one bit
Electronics, Mobile Phone, Phone

In typical Motorola fashion, the Razr series has leaked once again, and this time we’re getting our first proper look at the Razr 70 Ultra. The renders come courtesy of XpertPick, in collaboration with Steve Hemmerstoffer, also known as OnLeaks on X (formerly Twitter).

Is there anything fresh here?

Read more
Siri could soon support third-party AI tools in major iOS update
Apple lets Siri phone a friend (and it’s AI)
Siri

Apple is reportedly preparing one of the most significant changes to Siri in years, with plans to open its voice assistant to third-party AI services as part of the upcoming iOS 27 update. The move signals a major shift in Apple’s artificial intelligence strategy, transforming Siri from a closed assistant into a broader AI platform that can integrate with competing technologies.

A Shift Toward An Open AI Ecosystem

Read more
WhatsApp finally lets iPhone users run two accounts on the same device
One update, four fixes: WhatsApp gets dual iPhone accounts, smarter storage, seamless cross-platform transfers, and Meta AI tools baked right in.
WhatsApp feature drop.

WhatsApp has rolled out a major update rolling from March 26, and it genuinely makes me wonder what took so long. There are four key additions, enabling smarter storage management, cross-platform chat transfer, Meta AI tools, and, most importantly, dual accounts on iPhone. 

iPhone users can finally ditch their second phone

Read more