Google is reportedly preparing to extend a smart assistance feature beyond its Pixel smartphones to the wider Android ecosystem. The functionality, referred to as Contextual Suggestions, closely resembles Magic Cue, a software feature currently limited to Google’s Pixel 10 lineup. Early signs suggest the company is testing whether this experience can work reliably across a broader range of Android devices.
Contextual Suggestions is designed to make everyday phone interactions more efficient by offering timely prompts based on a user’s regular habits. Instead of requiring users to manually open apps or repeat the same steps, the system aims to anticipate what action might be useful at a given moment. For example, if someone regularly listens to a specific playlist during workouts, their phone may suggest that music when they arrive at the gym. Similarly, users who cast sports content to a television at the same time every week may receive an automatic casting suggestion at that familiar hour.
According to Google’s feature description, these suggestions are generated using activity patterns and location signals collected directly on the device. This information is stored within a protected, encrypted environment on the phone itself. Google states that the data never leaves the device, is not shared with apps, and is not accessible to the company unless the user explicitly chooses to share it for purposes such as submitting a bug report.
Within this encrypted space, on-device artificial intelligence analyzes usage behavior to identify recurring routines and predict actions that may be helpful. While apps and system services can present the resulting suggestions, they do not gain access to the underlying data used to produce them. Only the prediction is exposed, not the personal information behind it.
Privacy controls are a central part of the feature’s design. Contextual data is automatically deleted after 60 days by default, and users can remove it sooner through a “Manage your data” option. The entire feature can also be disabled for those who prefer not to receive contextual prompts at all.
Contextual Suggestions has begun appearing for a limited number of users running the latest beta version of Google Play Services, although access remains inconsistent even among beta testers. This indicates that the feature is still under controlled testing rather than a full rollout. When available, it appears under Settings > Google or Google Services > All Services > Others.
Google has not yet clarified which apps support Contextual Suggestions. Based on current observations, functionality may be restricted to system-level or Google-owned apps, though this has not been confirmed. The company also mentions the use of artificial intelligence but has not specified whether older or less powerful devices will be excluded due to hardware limitations.
As testing continues, further details are expected to emerge regarding compatibility, app support, and wider availability. For now, Contextual Suggestions reflects Google’s effort to balance convenience with on-device privacy, while cautiously evaluating how such features perform across the diverse Android ecosystem.
