After just over four years, I’ve finally come back to the world of Android, which means that once again I care about Android mobile games. A lot has changed since I was last here, but it seems I’m just in time for the biggest set of changes to hit the mobile platform since the first games hit the Play Store.
In an early March 2026 blog post, Google outlined its major plans to overhaul gaming on Google Play, and if things go the way Google promises it’s going to bring Android a lot closer to the gaming experience in Apple’s walled garden, and in some ways even beyond.
Google Play is finally treating mobile and PC gaming as one ecosystem
Taking a leaf from the Xbox book
The headline changes come from Google Play’s push into the world of PC. I guess they saw that both Epic and Amazon have PC and mobile storefronts, so why not Google?
You can head over to the Google Play for PC website right now and download the beta client for this service. It’s still pretty spartan, but I was able to download a game on my Windows PC and play it.
Even better, Google is bringing its own version of “Play Anywhere” like we have on Xbox. Certain select titles can be bought once, and then played on both PC and mobile. I guess Google is hoping that if someone wants to buy a game on PC and sees they can get the Android version for free, they’ll choose to buy it on the PC Play Store instead of Steam or one of the many other existing PC storefronts.
“Game trials” solve one of mobile gaming’s biggest problems
Try before you buy
Do you remember game demos? They’re still a thing, but to a much smaller extent. Instead, it’s more typical to have game trials. On PlayStation, for example, you can play the first two hours of an eligible full game for two hours. If you like it, you pay for the game and just keep playing. If you don’t, just delete it and move on with your life.
Even on PC using the Steam platform, you can refund any game for any reason if you have less than two hours of playtime racked up. So it makes sense that Google would want to bring the concept of a game trial to Google Play.
Paid games are making a comeback on Android
Yes, you might be wondering when paid games went away on Android and, of course, the answer is that they never did. However, there’s no denying that gaming on Android is dominated by free-to-play games and paid, premium games are a relative rarity compared to iPhone and iPad.
When you compare the game catalogs of Apple Arcade with Google Play Pass, the pickings are slim. It seems that Android users just don’t like paying a once-off price for a premium game, They prefer spending ten times as much in nickles and dimes while pulling that sweet slot machine lever in the latest gacha games.
Google wants to change that, and according to the update they are “actively expanding our library to include more paid games.”
The focus is on premium indie games for now, it seems, so don’t expect a flood of triple-A games. Which is a pity since smartphones are more than powerful enough to play games with more meat on their bones.
Google is building a Steam-like experience (but everywhere)
Though no one can beat Steam at its own game
It also seems Google Play is taking cues from Steam with new community features. The post talks about Community Posts for games, which I assume would be like the ones we get on Steam games. Though Google also mentions an AI “sidekick” that will give you AI-generated tips in supported games. I will leave it up to you, dear reader, if this is an idea that sounds appealing or not.
Why this might actually fix Android gaming for good
Everybody wins if the rules are good
There’s a big disconnect between Android hardware and Android video games. Over on the Apple side of things, I have bought an enormous number of premium games that pushed my iPhones and iPads to the limit. Whether original titles or ports from PC and consoles.
If these games come to Android, it’s usually long after the developer’s made its money back from Apple users. For various reasons, Android just isn’t as attractive a platform for mobile game developers making premium content rather than free-to-play slop.
Most of these announced changes are pushing things in the right direction to make Android more attractive for game devs, which is good for us because it means better games. There’s a reason Android gamers turn to console and PC emulation to play good, premium games on their powerful handsets.
The hardware is ready, the games are out there, now we just need the right place for it all to come together. Which means the ball is in Google’s court.
