Android 16 QPR2 reportedly improves your Pixel phone’s performance alongside a couple of new features
A major QPR update packed with UI polish, productivity upgrades, and performance boosts. Here’s why your Pixel might feel brand new again.
Nadeem Sarwar / Digital Trends
What’s happened? Google has started rolling out Android 16 QPR2 to supported Google Pixel phones, and it has reportedly improved the overall performance for several Pixel users.
- Several users on Reddit have reported that their Pixel smartphones are delivering improved performance after installing the Android 16 QPR2 update.
- While the update seems to have enhanced how Google’s Pixel 10 performs, it also makes older phones, like those from the Pixel 9 series, feel faster and smoother.
- While Google still hasn’t updated the PowerVR GPU driver (it lacked support for Android 16 at launch), the latest operating system still delivers a noticeable improvement in overall performance.
Why is this important? Android 16 QPR2 adds a host of new features to Pixel phones, including auto-themed icons, dark-theme enhancements, lock-screen widgets, 90:10 split-screen, on-device AI notification organization, improved media controls, and enhanced HDR brightness.
- For early adopters of the Pixel 10 series or the loyal Pixel users who haven’t upgraded to the latest version yet, the Android 16 QPR2 update should offer a quality-of-life improvement.
- A report by Android Police also notes that the Tensor G5’s OpenCL performance has jumped from 3063 to 4061 in Geekbench’s GPU benchmark.
- The report also cites a new Generational Concurrent Mark-Compact (CMC) Garbage Collector as the reason for the performance improvement, as it significantly reduces CPU usage, freeing up more bandwidth for other tasks.
Why should I care? If you own a Pixel smartphone that supports the latest Android update, you’re likely to notice a snappier, smoother user interface. The Android 16 QPR2 should result in less lag, faster transitions, and quicker app launches, making everyday usage more pleasant for users. In addition to performance improvements, the new features give you more control over how your Pixel smartphone looks and behaves across interfaces and menus.
OK, what’s next? More Pixel users should expect to get the Android 16 QPR2 update over the next few months. The success of this update could reinforce buyers’ confidence in the brand, as early adopters, especially of the Pixel 9 and Pixel 10 series, have complained about several issues on the devices, with performance being one of them.
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