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Googleâs Pixel 9 line packed a lot of firsts when it launched in late Augustâincluding two size options and a foldable versionâbut those were mostly reserved for the Pro models. When it comes to the base phone, thereâs not as much flash. But under the surface, it feels almost as good as its more expensive cousin. Thanks to a redesigned camera bar and some updated camera specs, this is Googleâs best base model phone in a while, so neck-and-neck with the Pixel 9 Pro that I bet some less discerning eyes couldnât tell the difference. Before shelling out $999 or more on the Pro, consider opting for the regular Pixel 9 instead. You might be surprised.
Google Pixel 9 - Porcelain - 128 GB with $100 Amazon Gift Card
$899.00 at Amazon
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Shop Now
$899.00 at Amazon
This year, most of the aesthetic changes have been reserved for the Pixel 9 Pro, which now comes in two sizes as well as a foldable version. But that doesnât mean thereâs nothing new on the standard Pixel 9.
The most noticeable update is the redesigned camera bar, which Google also added to the Pro. Unlike previous models, the camera bar on the Pixel 9 doesnât stretch across the whole width of the phone anymore, instead being sequestered to its own little oval. That doesnât mean much from a functional standpoint, but it does make everything look just a little cleaner, if only because itâs a little smaller and more rounded. Itâs also now a bit easier to hold the phone horizontally without accidentally touching your camera lens, too.
Credit: Michelle Ehrhardt
Otherwise, the Pixel 9 still uses your typical âcandy barâ format. There are no additional buttons, the corners are still rounded, and the dimensions and weight are the same as on the Pixel 8â6 x 2.8 x 0.3 inches, weighing 7 ounces. The speakers on the bottom of the phone have been consolidated into a single hole, but their capabilities remain the same.
It's a little disappointing that, like the Pixel 8 but not the 8a budget refresh, the back is still glossy here, meaning that it looks fancy but is prone to reflections and fingerprints. I tend to prefer matte finishes, and the 9 Pro is the only way to get one.
Colors for the Pixel 9 include Peony (pink), wintergreen (light green), porcelain (white), and obsidian (black). Itâs a shame not to see Bay Blue (light blue) returning from the 8 Pro and 8a, but this is still a more robust set of colors than the base Pixel 8 had at launch, so my fingers are crossed that weâll see more throughout the year.
Googleâs Pixel phones are known for their exclusive software like Live Transcribe or Magic Editor, and this year, the company is especially generous by making its biggest additions accessible across Pixel 9, Pixel 9 Pro, and Pixel 9 Pro Fold. Iâve already looked at these appsâScreenshots, Pixel Studio, and Gemini Liveâwhile reviewing the Pixel 9 Pro, and they work just as well here.
That said, I only really like one of them. Screenshots uses AI to add descriptions to screenshots on your phone, allowing you to quickly search through them like you would Google Images. Itâs great for finding documents like concert tickets or boarding passes at a momentâs notice, and while the descriptions arenât always strictly accurate, they usually have enough keywords in them to surface the pic you need towards the top of your results. My only issue is that this only applies to screenshots and not photos, although thatâs promised to be coming down the line.
Thereâs definitely a privacy concern here, especially as Screenshots can also read and summarize any text that might be in your captures, although a Google representative told me all the processing for Screenshots is done on-device. Itâs just a simple, unobtrusive utility that doesnât demand I change how I use my phone and does something I couldnât before, making it my clear favorite despite its more humble nature.
Credit: Michelle Ehrhardt
A bit more flashy is Pixel Studio, essentially an AI image generator baked into your phone. Pixel Studio uses a combination of local and cloud AI models, and allows you to more easily edit and remix images generated by Gemini. Google suggests using it to design things like birthday party invites, since itâs currently unable to depict humans, even with simple requests like âa cashier at a grocery store.â Unfortunately, that means itâs pretty limited compared to competitors, but even that hasnât stopped it from producing some unhinged results.
Despite the inability to generate humans, Pixel Studio can generate copyrighted characters, and I was able to make some photos of Mickey Mouse in a number of compromising positions. Again, check my Pixel 9 Pro review for more details, but even weeks after launch, itâs clear there are still safeguards that need to be put in place, unless Google wants to go full Grok.
Truthfully, once the novelty of putting cartoon characters in mature situations wears off, thereâs not a lot I could see myself using Pixel Studio for: The more mundane use cases feel about as compelling as âmake your own greeting cardâ software from the â90s. Gemini Live is also something I donât see myself using often. It essentially takes Googleâs Gemini chatbot and lets you interact with it over voice, with an AI-generated conversation partner in return. The baseline tech here is impressiveâGemini Live sounds friendly, and I was able to cut it off and change the subject often without issue. But the problem is that it still makes mistakes just as often as the regular Gemini chatbot.
I had Gemini Live tell me to carry an umbrella in 80 degree weather, or tell me that Kamala Harris would be debating Tim Walz the night I wrote this review. As with most AI hallucinations, these statements were said with total confidence, making it hard to trust anything Gemini said. I was able to call out the app on hallucinations and get it to walk back mistakes, but if I did this too many times, it would just crash, making Gemini feel a bit like a frustrated child taking their ball and going home.
Outside of Gemini Live, Google is also pushing Gemini more strongly across the Pixel 9 line, making it the default replacement for the Google Assistant. This is a mistake, flat out. Gemini can do some simple things like set timers or alarms, but as of yet, itâs still unable to perform other common tasks like setting reminders or turning on Live Captionsâthings Google Assistant does with ease.
Beyond the new dedicated apps, Googleâs existing features got a few AI upgrades this year, too. These are most prominent in the Photos app, where youâll be able to access Add Me and Reimagine.
I was looking forward to Add Me, which uses AI to stitch two photos together so nobody has to be left out of a shot. You just take a photo of your group, hand the phone off to someone else who was in that first group shot, and take a new photo with you in it. Then, the phone intelligently mixes the photos so youâre all there.
Unfortunately, it didnât really work out in practice, with all results looking noticeably altered. When my fiancĂŠ and I tried it, our heights in relation to each other were all wrong, the shadows and lighting didnât look natural, and it was best for us not to stand close to each other, or else the feature might blend our bodies together while mixing the photos. Itâs a cute demo, but not something I would use even for a casual social media post.
Credit: Michelle Ehrhardt
Reimagine is a bit of a touchier subject. Essentially, this allows you to use AI to generate fake imagery within your real-life photos. Like Pixel Studio, it attempts to introduce safeguards but still canât catch everything. For instance, I was able to add realistic used needles to multiple photos without issue. You can imagine the problems that might cause for something like cyberbullying, should edited photos of a target be posted online or passed onto a less-than-discerning authority figure.
Iâm not the first person to raise this issue, but as Iâm posting this review a month after launch, itâs a shame that Google still hasnât done anything about it.
Unfortunately, while itâs nice to see Googleâs new AI features generally available across all Pixel 9 models, they ultimately still feel like betas to me. Thatâs not a great sign about where Googleâs Pixel software will head in the future, especially as it continues to explore sensitive subjects like AI imagery.
I loved the Pixel 9 Proâs camera setup, and the good news is that shots taken on the regular Pixel 9 look almost as good. Thatâs because these phones have the same wide and ultrawide sensors, so both standard shots and close ups will look identical between devices. Plus, no matter which phone you pick, theyâll rival shots taken on the iPhone 15 Pro.
If that sounds too good to be true, the catch is that the Pixel 9 has no telephoto lens. Optical zoom maxes out at 2x, and software zoom wonât allow for anything more than 8x. Not that youâll really want to go past thatâphotos start to look pretty muddy even before then.
The front camera also tops out at 10.5 MP vs. the Pixel 9 Proâs 42 MP, so selfies will look more detailed on the more expensive model.
Hereâs a few Pixel 9 shots taken at various times of day. Note that Iâve had to compress these for this webpage, and that night shots use the Pixelâs âNight Sightâ feature to intelligently brighten the background.
Credit: Michelle Ehrhardt
Credit: Michelle Ehrhardt
Credit: Michelle Ehrhardt
And here are some equivalent shots from my iPhone 15 Pro. Generally, itâs impressive to see a non-Pro phone hold its own against Appleâs premium cameras.
Credit: Michelle Ehrhardt
Credit: Michelle Ehrhardt
Credit: Michelle Ehrhardt
Unfortunately, despite the cameraâs power, the base Pixel 9 does not come with Pro camera controls in its menu, which continues a frustrating trend on Googleâs part. This means youâre not able to turn on the 50 MP photo mode, which saves 50 MP jpegs to your phone, even though the camera has a 50 MP sensor. You can still capture RAW photos, so you still have a way to use your cameraâs full power, but the RAW file format can be annoying for casual users. Most people are probably going to just keep taking 12 MP photos without even realizing their phone can do more. This will be great for their storage space, but Google has no excuse for limiting 50 MP photos to the Pro models when the base hardware is perfectly capable of them.
Performance on the base Pixel 9 should be about as good as the Pixel 9 Pro, as it has the same chip, the Google Tensor G4. It comes with less RAM, and didnât always perform as well in my tests, but the Pixel 9 definitely felt like it kept up with the Pro in real world useâwhich is to say, it has some issues.
In Geekbench 6, a synthetic benchmark for testing general performance across multiple different types of tasks, I got a score of 1,227 on single-core tasks and 3,172 on multi-core tasks, indicating that, at least on paper, this phone is highly CPU limited. By comparison, I got a score of 1,924/5,628 on the Pixel 9 Pro, and 2,938/7,250 on the iPhone 15 Pro. Curiously, my results were even below the Pixel 7âs.
Granted, synthetic benchmarks arenât always a great indicator of real-world use. To test actual, in-the-hands performance, I took the Pixel 9 into Genshin Impact, a graphically demanding open-world game. Here, I got results about on par with the Pixel 9 Pro, although I occasionally lagged a few frames behind it. I got between 50â60 fps on the gameâs lowest settings, and about 40â55 fps on the highest settings, although numbers were more consistently high on the lower-end. I also wouldnât recommend gaming at high settings for long, as the phone heats up pretty quickly under that kind of strain, eventually getting painful to the touch. Itâs subjective, but for me, the heat seemed to be a bigger problem on the 9 than the Pro.
While this phone isnât for gaming, my issues here donât necessarily paint a kind picture for other high performance apps, like video editors. This problem isnât new for the Pixel, since Googleâs chips are designed to put Pixel software exclusives and AI first. For those, it works great, hitting a fine balance between performance and efficiency. But those who regularly stray outside of Googleâs ecosystem will probably prefer a phone with a more jack-of-all-trades Qualcomm chip, like the Samsung Galaxy S24.
Google promises at least a 24 hour battery life, if not more, for the Pixel 9 under âmedianâ conditions, and in my testing, it came quite close. While playing a 24-hour YouTube video at 720p and 50% brightness over wifi, I got about 22 hours and 40 minutes of battery life, and that was with all battery saver features turned off. That's actually four more hours than what I got on the Pixel 9 Pro, and should be more than enough for most people. It actually matches Apple's promises for iPhone 16 battery life almost exactly. In more strenuous conditions, such as extended photo or gaming sessions, battery also didn't prove to be an issue, as I was able to get multiple hours in between charges, but your mileage may vary depending on how many photos you take or which game you're playing.
Not much has changed on the Pixel 9âs display over the Pixel 8âs. Itâs still 6.3-inches long, still uses Googleâs âActuaâ screen tech (the companyâs marketing term for a bright OLED), and still caps out at 2,700 nits.
Thatâs plenty for most people, although I found I wanted the brightness somewhere in the 80% range indoors and 90% range outdoors. Iâve gotten to be a bit of a brightness snob of late, though, and most people will probably be OK around 60%. Itâs probably best just to leave the phoneâs Adaptive Brightness feature on and let it choose for you.
One nice upgrade to the display here is actually as simple as a software tweak. For some reason, the Pixel 8 required you to dig into settings to enable its 120Hz mode, which gives you a smoother display at the cost of some battery life. This means most people probably never bothered with it, but it was on by default on my review model. To check if you have 120Hz enabled, go to Settings > Display and ensure the âSmooth Displayâ toggle is switched on. Iâd say itâs well worth using Smooth Display, as the phone will automatically lower the fps when your always-on display ticks on, which will help counteract the battery life drain.
As for viewing content, itâs OLED. Blacks are deep, colors are vivid, and text is easy to read, especially in dark mode. I used the Pixel 9 to watch an Astro Bot stream as I was writing this review, and the game looked so pretty that Iâm having a hard time not immediately buying it. (I still havenât finished Final Fantasy VII Rebirth.)
Credit: Michelle Ehrhardt
Googleâs Pixel 9 is a scrappy little phone, and despite not being as flashy as a Pixel 9 Pro, Pro XL or Pro Fold, itâs probably enough for most people. This is one of Googleâs most generous models, packing all of the Pixel 9 lineâs biggest new AI additions as well as an updated camera setup thatâs almost as good as the Pro modelâs. The screen isnât quite as bright or high resolution, and the base model still has the same issues as its more expensive cousin, especially when it comes to third party app performance, but youâre not going to lose out on much if you go with the regular Pixel this time around. Itâs still a commitment, starting at $799, but if you have yet to enter Googleâs ecosystem and donât want to buy an older phone, this is a good way to do so while spending just a little bit less.
Full story here:
Google Pixel 9 - Porcelain - 128 GB with $100 Amazon Gift Card
$899.00 at Amazon
Shop Now
Shop Now
$899.00 at Amazon
A redesigned camera bar
This year, most of the aesthetic changes have been reserved for the Pixel 9 Pro, which now comes in two sizes as well as a foldable version. But that doesnât mean thereâs nothing new on the standard Pixel 9.
The most noticeable update is the redesigned camera bar, which Google also added to the Pro. Unlike previous models, the camera bar on the Pixel 9 doesnât stretch across the whole width of the phone anymore, instead being sequestered to its own little oval. That doesnât mean much from a functional standpoint, but it does make everything look just a little cleaner, if only because itâs a little smaller and more rounded. Itâs also now a bit easier to hold the phone horizontally without accidentally touching your camera lens, too.
Credit: Michelle Ehrhardt
Otherwise, the Pixel 9 still uses your typical âcandy barâ format. There are no additional buttons, the corners are still rounded, and the dimensions and weight are the same as on the Pixel 8â6 x 2.8 x 0.3 inches, weighing 7 ounces. The speakers on the bottom of the phone have been consolidated into a single hole, but their capabilities remain the same.
It's a little disappointing that, like the Pixel 8 but not the 8a budget refresh, the back is still glossy here, meaning that it looks fancy but is prone to reflections and fingerprints. I tend to prefer matte finishes, and the 9 Pro is the only way to get one.
Colors for the Pixel 9 include Peony (pink), wintergreen (light green), porcelain (white), and obsidian (black). Itâs a shame not to see Bay Blue (light blue) returning from the 8 Pro and 8a, but this is still a more robust set of colors than the base Pixel 8 had at launch, so my fingers are crossed that weâll see more throughout the year.
Disappointing AI additions
Googleâs Pixel phones are known for their exclusive software like Live Transcribe or Magic Editor, and this year, the company is especially generous by making its biggest additions accessible across Pixel 9, Pixel 9 Pro, and Pixel 9 Pro Fold. Iâve already looked at these appsâScreenshots, Pixel Studio, and Gemini Liveâwhile reviewing the Pixel 9 Pro, and they work just as well here.
That said, I only really like one of them. Screenshots uses AI to add descriptions to screenshots on your phone, allowing you to quickly search through them like you would Google Images. Itâs great for finding documents like concert tickets or boarding passes at a momentâs notice, and while the descriptions arenât always strictly accurate, they usually have enough keywords in them to surface the pic you need towards the top of your results. My only issue is that this only applies to screenshots and not photos, although thatâs promised to be coming down the line.
Thereâs definitely a privacy concern here, especially as Screenshots can also read and summarize any text that might be in your captures, although a Google representative told me all the processing for Screenshots is done on-device. Itâs just a simple, unobtrusive utility that doesnât demand I change how I use my phone and does something I couldnât before, making it my clear favorite despite its more humble nature.
Credit: Michelle Ehrhardt
A bit more flashy is Pixel Studio, essentially an AI image generator baked into your phone. Pixel Studio uses a combination of local and cloud AI models, and allows you to more easily edit and remix images generated by Gemini. Google suggests using it to design things like birthday party invites, since itâs currently unable to depict humans, even with simple requests like âa cashier at a grocery store.â Unfortunately, that means itâs pretty limited compared to competitors, but even that hasnât stopped it from producing some unhinged results.
Despite the inability to generate humans, Pixel Studio can generate copyrighted characters, and I was able to make some photos of Mickey Mouse in a number of compromising positions. Again, check my Pixel 9 Pro review for more details, but even weeks after launch, itâs clear there are still safeguards that need to be put in place, unless Google wants to go full Grok.
Truthfully, once the novelty of putting cartoon characters in mature situations wears off, thereâs not a lot I could see myself using Pixel Studio for: The more mundane use cases feel about as compelling as âmake your own greeting cardâ software from the â90s. Gemini Live is also something I donât see myself using often. It essentially takes Googleâs Gemini chatbot and lets you interact with it over voice, with an AI-generated conversation partner in return. The baseline tech here is impressiveâGemini Live sounds friendly, and I was able to cut it off and change the subject often without issue. But the problem is that it still makes mistakes just as often as the regular Gemini chatbot.
I had Gemini Live tell me to carry an umbrella in 80 degree weather, or tell me that Kamala Harris would be debating Tim Walz the night I wrote this review. As with most AI hallucinations, these statements were said with total confidence, making it hard to trust anything Gemini said. I was able to call out the app on hallucinations and get it to walk back mistakes, but if I did this too many times, it would just crash, making Gemini feel a bit like a frustrated child taking their ball and going home.
Outside of Gemini Live, Google is also pushing Gemini more strongly across the Pixel 9 line, making it the default replacement for the Google Assistant. This is a mistake, flat out. Gemini can do some simple things like set timers or alarms, but as of yet, itâs still unable to perform other common tasks like setting reminders or turning on Live Captionsâthings Google Assistant does with ease.
Beyond the new dedicated apps, Googleâs existing features got a few AI upgrades this year, too. These are most prominent in the Photos app, where youâll be able to access Add Me and Reimagine.
I was looking forward to Add Me, which uses AI to stitch two photos together so nobody has to be left out of a shot. You just take a photo of your group, hand the phone off to someone else who was in that first group shot, and take a new photo with you in it. Then, the phone intelligently mixes the photos so youâre all there.
Unfortunately, it didnât really work out in practice, with all results looking noticeably altered. When my fiancĂŠ and I tried it, our heights in relation to each other were all wrong, the shadows and lighting didnât look natural, and it was best for us not to stand close to each other, or else the feature might blend our bodies together while mixing the photos. Itâs a cute demo, but not something I would use even for a casual social media post.
Credit: Michelle Ehrhardt
Reimagine is a bit of a touchier subject. Essentially, this allows you to use AI to generate fake imagery within your real-life photos. Like Pixel Studio, it attempts to introduce safeguards but still canât catch everything. For instance, I was able to add realistic used needles to multiple photos without issue. You can imagine the problems that might cause for something like cyberbullying, should edited photos of a target be posted online or passed onto a less-than-discerning authority figure.
Iâm not the first person to raise this issue, but as Iâm posting this review a month after launch, itâs a shame that Google still hasnât done anything about it.
Unfortunately, while itâs nice to see Googleâs new AI features generally available across all Pixel 9 models, they ultimately still feel like betas to me. Thatâs not a great sign about where Googleâs Pixel software will head in the future, especially as it continues to explore sensitive subjects like AI imagery.
Cameras that feel pro-level
I loved the Pixel 9 Proâs camera setup, and the good news is that shots taken on the regular Pixel 9 look almost as good. Thatâs because these phones have the same wide and ultrawide sensors, so both standard shots and close ups will look identical between devices. Plus, no matter which phone you pick, theyâll rival shots taken on the iPhone 15 Pro.
If that sounds too good to be true, the catch is that the Pixel 9 has no telephoto lens. Optical zoom maxes out at 2x, and software zoom wonât allow for anything more than 8x. Not that youâll really want to go past thatâphotos start to look pretty muddy even before then.
The front camera also tops out at 10.5 MP vs. the Pixel 9 Proâs 42 MP, so selfies will look more detailed on the more expensive model.
Hereâs a few Pixel 9 shots taken at various times of day. Note that Iâve had to compress these for this webpage, and that night shots use the Pixelâs âNight Sightâ feature to intelligently brighten the background.
Credit: Michelle Ehrhardt
Credit: Michelle Ehrhardt
Credit: Michelle Ehrhardt
And here are some equivalent shots from my iPhone 15 Pro. Generally, itâs impressive to see a non-Pro phone hold its own against Appleâs premium cameras.
Credit: Michelle Ehrhardt
Credit: Michelle Ehrhardt
Credit: Michelle Ehrhardt
Unfortunately, despite the cameraâs power, the base Pixel 9 does not come with Pro camera controls in its menu, which continues a frustrating trend on Googleâs part. This means youâre not able to turn on the 50 MP photo mode, which saves 50 MP jpegs to your phone, even though the camera has a 50 MP sensor. You can still capture RAW photos, so you still have a way to use your cameraâs full power, but the RAW file format can be annoying for casual users. Most people are probably going to just keep taking 12 MP photos without even realizing their phone can do more. This will be great for their storage space, but Google has no excuse for limiting 50 MP photos to the Pro models when the base hardware is perfectly capable of them.
Performance is still lacking
Performance on the base Pixel 9 should be about as good as the Pixel 9 Pro, as it has the same chip, the Google Tensor G4. It comes with less RAM, and didnât always perform as well in my tests, but the Pixel 9 definitely felt like it kept up with the Pro in real world useâwhich is to say, it has some issues.
In Geekbench 6, a synthetic benchmark for testing general performance across multiple different types of tasks, I got a score of 1,227 on single-core tasks and 3,172 on multi-core tasks, indicating that, at least on paper, this phone is highly CPU limited. By comparison, I got a score of 1,924/5,628 on the Pixel 9 Pro, and 2,938/7,250 on the iPhone 15 Pro. Curiously, my results were even below the Pixel 7âs.
Granted, synthetic benchmarks arenât always a great indicator of real-world use. To test actual, in-the-hands performance, I took the Pixel 9 into Genshin Impact, a graphically demanding open-world game. Here, I got results about on par with the Pixel 9 Pro, although I occasionally lagged a few frames behind it. I got between 50â60 fps on the gameâs lowest settings, and about 40â55 fps on the highest settings, although numbers were more consistently high on the lower-end. I also wouldnât recommend gaming at high settings for long, as the phone heats up pretty quickly under that kind of strain, eventually getting painful to the touch. Itâs subjective, but for me, the heat seemed to be a bigger problem on the 9 than the Pro.
While this phone isnât for gaming, my issues here donât necessarily paint a kind picture for other high performance apps, like video editors. This problem isnât new for the Pixel, since Googleâs chips are designed to put Pixel software exclusives and AI first. For those, it works great, hitting a fine balance between performance and efficiency. But those who regularly stray outside of Googleâs ecosystem will probably prefer a phone with a more jack-of-all-trades Qualcomm chip, like the Samsung Galaxy S24.
Battery life
Google promises at least a 24 hour battery life, if not more, for the Pixel 9 under âmedianâ conditions, and in my testing, it came quite close. While playing a 24-hour YouTube video at 720p and 50% brightness over wifi, I got about 22 hours and 40 minutes of battery life, and that was with all battery saver features turned off. That's actually four more hours than what I got on the Pixel 9 Pro, and should be more than enough for most people. It actually matches Apple's promises for iPhone 16 battery life almost exactly. In more strenuous conditions, such as extended photo or gaming sessions, battery also didn't prove to be an issue, as I was able to get multiple hours in between charges, but your mileage may vary depending on how many photos you take or which game you're playing.
A strong display
Not much has changed on the Pixel 9âs display over the Pixel 8âs. Itâs still 6.3-inches long, still uses Googleâs âActuaâ screen tech (the companyâs marketing term for a bright OLED), and still caps out at 2,700 nits.
Thatâs plenty for most people, although I found I wanted the brightness somewhere in the 80% range indoors and 90% range outdoors. Iâve gotten to be a bit of a brightness snob of late, though, and most people will probably be OK around 60%. Itâs probably best just to leave the phoneâs Adaptive Brightness feature on and let it choose for you.
One nice upgrade to the display here is actually as simple as a software tweak. For some reason, the Pixel 8 required you to dig into settings to enable its 120Hz mode, which gives you a smoother display at the cost of some battery life. This means most people probably never bothered with it, but it was on by default on my review model. To check if you have 120Hz enabled, go to Settings > Display and ensure the âSmooth Displayâ toggle is switched on. Iâd say itâs well worth using Smooth Display, as the phone will automatically lower the fps when your always-on display ticks on, which will help counteract the battery life drain.
As for viewing content, itâs OLED. Blacks are deep, colors are vivid, and text is easy to read, especially in dark mode. I used the Pixel 9 to watch an Astro Bot stream as I was writing this review, and the game looked so pretty that Iâm having a hard time not immediately buying it. (I still havenât finished Final Fantasy VII Rebirth.)
Credit: Michelle Ehrhardt
Should you buy the Pixel 9?
Googleâs Pixel 9 is a scrappy little phone, and despite not being as flashy as a Pixel 9 Pro, Pro XL or Pro Fold, itâs probably enough for most people. This is one of Googleâs most generous models, packing all of the Pixel 9 lineâs biggest new AI additions as well as an updated camera setup thatâs almost as good as the Pro modelâs. The screen isnât quite as bright or high resolution, and the base model still has the same issues as its more expensive cousin, especially when it comes to third party app performance, but youâre not going to lose out on much if you go with the regular Pixel this time around. Itâs still a commitment, starting at $799, but if you have yet to enter Googleâs ecosystem and donât want to buy an older phone, this is a good way to do so while spending just a little bit less.
Full story here: