Skip to main content

Insert Stormtroopers into your life with Google’s new AR stickers for Pixel

Google Pixel 2 | The Last Jedi AR Stickers
Packed with the latest hardware and equipped with possibly the best single sensor camera on a smartphone, the Pixel phones are Google’s answer to the high-end smartphone market. As such, they get a good amount of love from Google itself. The latest update Pixel owners can expect to see on their smartphone adds a whole bunch of fun Augmented Reality Stickers to the Pixel camera app.

Announced via Google’s blog, the update allows users to add animated characters and emojis directly into the scene in front of them, via the Pixel’s camera:

You don’t have to travel to a galaxy far, far away to team up with characters from Star Wars: The Last Jedi, like BB-8, a stormtrooper, or a porg. You can play around with Eleven, the Demogorgon, and your other favorite characters from Netflix’s Stranger Things; use Foodmoji and 3D Text stickers when you’re feeling hungry; or shoot a celebratory video at your New Year’s party with AR balloons and champagne.

pixel ar stickers
Julian Chokkattu/Digital Trends
Julian Chokkattu/Digital Trends

Inserting a character is as simple as tapping to enter the AR Mode in your camera app, choosing a sticker pack, and dragging-and-dropping them into the scene. Once there, you can resize, rotate, and move them as you see fit. Characters inserted into the scene will stay where you’ve placed them, even if you move the camera away, and they will interact with other characters placed into the same area. Once you’ve captured your scene, you can easily share the picture or video with your friends on social media. Sticker packs currently include stylized characters from Stranger Things, Star Wars, and various different emoji and food-based stickers.

The update will be rolling out as a part of Android 8.1 Oreo on Pixel phones, and will be coming to all Pixel phones “over the coming days.”

This update comes as a part of Google’s drive to add more virtual reality (VR) and augmented reality (AR) content to Android. Google’s Daydream VR aims to bring VR to even more Android devices, and Pixel smartphone cameras also gained some added brains with the addition of Google Lens; a smart lens that can identify landmarks and provide history, or save information from business cards.

Editors' Recommendations

Mark Jansen
Mark Jansen is an avid follower of everything that beeps, bloops, or makes pretty lights. He has a degree in Ancient &…
The 10 most important things to know about the Google Pixel 8a
Promo image for the Google Pixel 8a, showing renders of the phone in all four colors.

Google has just announced the next Pixel A-series device -- the new Google Pixel 8a. The A-series is the more budget-friendly Pixel option, and it comes out halfway in the cycle to the next mainline Pixel device.

This year, the Pixel 8a offers some big upgrades over its predecessor, the Google Pixel 7a. It’s also more similarly matched with the standard Pixel 8 and Pixel 8 Pro, both of which came out in October 2023.

Read more
Google just launched a new Pixel Tablet … kind of
The Google Pixel Tablet sitting outside with its screen on.

With the excitement of the Google Pixel 8a launch, it might have passed a little unnoticed that Google also launched a new Pixel Tablet — though not exactly. For one thing, the “new” Pixel Tablet is the exact same device as the “old” Pixel Tablet. We mean that literally: same specs, same look, same screen. The only difference with the newly launched Pixel Tablet is that it’ll be sold without its charging/speaker dock, unlike the previous model, which included it.

At $399, the new Pixel Tablet is $100 cheaper than the earlier model, but that’s to be expected — both because it doesn’t come with any hardware refresh and also because it cuts the dock. It's also worth noting that it will not be launched with any new first-party accessories like a keyboard or stylus, which were previously rumored for the tablet.

Read more
The Google Pixel 8a price just leaked. Here’s how much it’ll cost
A photo of someone holding the mint Google Pixel 8a.

And so concludes the saga of Google Pixel 8a leaks, merely days ahead of its expected unveiling at the I/O developers conference. Earlier today, insider @OnLeaks (in collaboration with Smartprix) shared more marketing renders of the upcoming budget phone, complete with its asking price in tow.

It seems Google is going to charge $499 for its next phone, at least the 128GB base storage variant, that is. For the 256GB storage variant, buyers will have to shell out $599. That’s the same asking price as the Google Pixel 7a, which arrived last year and won plaudits for its terrific mix of raw firepower, camera prowess, and feature-loaded Pixel software experience.

Read more