Skip to main content
  1. Home
  2. Phones
  3. Mobile
  4. Features

The Pixel 9 completely changed my mind about Google Pixel phones

Add as a preferred source on Google
Pixel 9 Pro in Rose Quartz.
Christine Romero-Chan / Digital Trends

I confess: I’ve never been a Google Pixel fan. Every year, I wait for Google to release something new, I buy it, and I am left disappointed. Google’s phones have never felt as premium as the competition, but the Google Pixel 9 has completely changed that. It’s the best regular-sized phone I’ve ever used. It’s also convinced me to go all-in on Google this year and buy the Pixel 9 Pro.

One of my disappointments with the Google Pixel 8 Pro is its size: I have been waiting for Google to deliver a Pro phone without compromises, and the Pixel 9 series finally delivers. For most people, the regular Pixel 9 is the phone to buy, but if you want improvements in the display, battery, charging, and camera, the Pixel 9 Pro is the winner.

Recommended Videos

Here’s how Google completely changed my mind about its phones.

The Pixel 9 focuses on usability

Someone holding the Google Pixel 9 Pro XL.
Joe Maring / Digital Trends

It’s rare that every phone a company releases in a single cycle is universally acclaimed, but this year, Google has hit that mark. We’re yet to see reviews of the Pixel 9 Pro Fold, but our reviews of the Pixel 9, Pixel 9 Pro, and Pixel 9 Pro XL are all universally positive.

Every improvement Google has made has boosted the usability of each phone. The rounded curves make for a more pleasant feel in the hand, while some of Google’s AI features are quirky and useful. The Pixel 8 Pro felt childish, but the Pixel 9 series feels grown-up, mature, and outstanding.

Features like Add Me are clever, intuitive, and, more importantly, fun. The Magic Editor has impressive generative AI capabilities. Made You Look will make taking photos of my 3-year-old niece easier. Reimagine and Pixel Studio will unleash your wildest imagination, at least for a while.

I expected to find a flawed experience, and instead, the Pixel 9 makes the bulk of my iPhone 15 Pro Max feel unnecessary. If there was ever a phone that encapsulated an Android version of the iPhone, it is the Pixel 9 series. Little things add a sparkle to the Pixel 9 experience, which has a certain “je ne sais quoi”to it.

How Google got the Pixel 9 so right this year

The Google Pixel 9 sitting upright.
Joe Maring / Digital Trends

Google has made three critical improvements to the Pixel 9 that impact its performance: subtle hardware changes, improvements in performance and cooling, and nifty AI features that are endless sources of fun.

The size of the Pixel 9 and Pixel 9 Pro is perfect. I’ve tried hundreds of phones, and none feel as good in the hand. The one that comes closest is the Samsung Galaxy S24, but the Pixel 9’s curves are more rounded and ergonomically friendly. It’s a phone you want to pick up thanks to a winning combination of practicality and usability.

My primary concern with the regular Pixel 9 was the lack of a telephoto lens. I use the telephoto on phones often, and while there are times when it feels lacking on the Pixel 9, these are surprisingly few and far between. Up to 4x, the camera is good enough thanks to excellent image processing, but above this, the flaws become more noticeable.

Even the battery hasn’t been a concern. At 4,700mAh, it’s smaller than the one in the Pixel 8 Pro, but lasts longer. It has a smaller Super Actua display — that’s equally excellent to its siblings — but it doesn’t feel lacking, and there’s no substitute for how friendly the size is. Google achieved what no other phone maker has been able to: a smaller Pro phone with no cutbacks.

Why the Pixel 9 Pro is probably my long-term smartphone

A close-up of the camera on the Google Pixel 9 Pro.
Joe Maring / Digital Trends

The only thing that lets the Pixel 9 down is the lack of a telephoto lens — it’s not even the lack of telephoto as much as the inability to zoom beyond 8x. That’s why I’ll be moving to the Pixel 9 Pro. The addition of the telephoto lens, improvements in the display and charging, and a far superior selfie camera are why I bought a Pixel 9 Pro.

Google finally delivered a smaller Pro phone with no compromises. It is glorious.

Then there’s Gemini Advanced. The regular Pixel 9 comes with a month’s trial to Gemini Advanced — which encompasses the best Gemini AI features — but the Pro phones come with a year for free (a very nice $240 value). Combine that with the best Pixel 9 trade-in deals, the Pixel 9 Pro is a no-brainer.

Last year was the first time I switched from the Pro model to the iPhone 15 Pro Max as Apple added the 5x telephone to its biggest smartphone. The bigger iPhone was better than the smaller Pro model in many ways, but the size transition was challenging.

The Pixel 9 has reminded me why I liked the smaller Pro in the first place, and the Pixel 9 Pro reinforces that, earning it a spot in my pocket — and changing my opinion of the Pixel family as a whole.

Nirave Gondhia
Nirave is a creator, evangelist, and founder of House of Tech. A heart attack at 33 inspired him to publish the Impact of…
Don’t breathe easy just yet. Apple and Microsoft aren’t done with price hikes.
Xbox and Apple device price hikes could be a warning for the rest of the tech industry.
Apple logo glass building

Earlier today, Microsoft raised the price of its Xbox consoles by up to $150 in the U.S. Just a few hours before that, Apple announced a similar move for its Mac and iPad portfolio, while also raising the sticker price of its Vision Pro headset and several other products except the iPhone. But it seems these two giants are not done with price hikes yet.

Neither company has explicitly said that more price hikes are coming, but their statements suggest otherwise. Take, for example, this statement that Apple shared with The Washington Post earlier today.

Read more
Samsung’s wider Galaxy Z Fold 8 may fix the two foldable flaws people still complain about
The Galaxy Z Fold 8 Wide may be the complete foldable Samsung had envisioned
Electronics, Mobile Phone, Phone

Samsung’s next premium book-style foldable may do more than refine its design and get the annual spec bump. A new leak suggests the rumored Galaxy Z Fold 8 Wide could directly address two of the most annoying foldable complaints, namely the weight and display crease.

According to sources who have handled samples of Samsung’s wider Fold 8 model, the phone feels surprisingly light. he actual weight is still unconfirmed, but previous leaks have pointed to around 201g, which would make it lighter than the 215g Galaxy Z Fold 7 and even the 214g Galaxy S26 Ultra. This might not sound like a big deal till you've actually used a foldable phone. I recently reviewed the Motorola Razr Fold, and despite its slim design, the heft is what kept me away from switching to it for a while.

Read more
This Oppo phone has a wild 3D back, but its magnetic Bubble is the real party trick
Oppo’s Reno 16 Pro wants to be your camera, editor, and vanity mirror
Electronics, Mobile Phone, Phone

Oppo has started rolling out the Reno 16 Pro globally, giving Europe its newest style-heavy, camera-focused Android phone with a few impressive numbers on the spec sheet.

The European model is listed in Germany and Austria in a single 12GB RAM + 512GB storage configuration. It costs €1,099, though Oppo is offering a launch discount that brings it down to €899 until July 31. Pre-orders are open now, with release set for July 3. Considering how the Reno lineup is considered the brand's upper mid-range model, the price is nothing to scoff at. But Oppo isn't raising the prices for nothing. It is pushing the Reno line closer to premium territory, with cameras, design, and creator-friendly extras doing most of the selling.

Read more