Google Just Couldn’t Hold The Pixel 10 Until August
Summary
- Google leaks Pixel 10 design early, sticking to the same look as Pixel 9—at least from the outside.
- Android Headlines reports Pixel 10 may have 3 rear cameras. Other rumors suggest a new, redesigned Tensor chip.
- Google struggles to prevent hardware leaks and often prefers to reveal the phone to offset the impact.
Google does things a lot differently from most other Android OEMs. And one of the things it does differently is that it’s really bad at preventing leaks—and for years I’ve been sure they do this on purpose. If you thought Google was going to do things differently this year, too bad—the company just couldn’t hold the Pixel 10 for a few more weeks.
In anticipation of its hardware event on August 20th, Google just… decided to spill the beans on the Pixel 10 earlier anyway. The company published a teaser of the Google Pixel 10, its next major flagship due to be announced next month. It didn’t announce any official hardware details or anything of the like, but it did confirm that it will have basically the same exact design as the Google Pixel 9, which means we’re probably just in for an incremental update. It’s not clear if the phone depicted in the teaser is the Pixel 10 or the Pixel 10 Pro.
In case you missed it, Android Headlines leaked a few official Pixel 10 renders, and Google is seemingly adding a third rear camera to the base Pixel 10 model—something that was previously reserved for the Pixel Pro models only. That might be the only “big” outside hardware change, though. On the inside, there’s more stuff rumored, including a new Tensor chip that will see Google move away from Samsung for manufacturing to TSMC, which might either be a really good idea or backfire terribly for a few generations.

Related
Google’s Pixel 10 Reveal Event Finally Has a Date
The event is much closer to the next iPhone announcement.
Google has been noted for just “giving up” on covering up its hardware announcements at some point in its release cycle. This has happened with Google several times—once leaks start rolling in, the company just decides to start teasing the phone itself, presumably to offset the impact of more leaks. The company has never quite figured out its leak problem, and in the past, we’ve gone as far as having prototypes out in the public. That hasn’t happened in quite a while, thankfully, but Google hasn’t exactly tightened things up either. Just this year, it wasn’t secretive enough with the location it chose for shooting its marketing materials, resulting in real-life pictures of the phone leaking to the public.
If you want to know what’s next in the Google Pixel range, you’ll have to wait until August 20th, when Google will do a full unveil with specs and availability information. We’ll get more info through leaks, surely, but the official announcement is less than a month away.
Source: Google Store via Mishaal Rahman (Twitter/X)