Bay and Aloe are out, Peony and Iris are in
Iris, meanwhile, sounds like an entirely new hue for the Pixel family, replacing the current Bay paint job as a “bluish-purple option” likely to appeal to a lot of buyers who want to stand out from the future crowd of 9a owners, but maybe not as much as Peony adopters.
The Pixel 9a looks a bit… muted compared to the 8a in these leaked renders.
Peony and Iris will join the Porcelain and Obsidian colorways that are not going anywhere, which means that the Aloe flavor is also set to go the way of the dodo… and the aforementioned Bay model. All in all, the Pixel 9a‘s expected quartet of colors sounds pretty well-balanced and just diverse enough to potentially please all prospective buyers and cash-strapped Google fans.
Specifically, the Pixel 9a should be just a tad taller and narrower than its predecessor while lowering the overall product thickness by 0.4mm. There are no words on weight at this time, but it feels reasonable to fear a battery capacity downgrade of some sort.
What Pixel 9a upgrades should you expect?
A jump from a Tensor G3 processor to the Tensor G4 that also powers the current Pixel 9 trio is naturally virtually guaranteed, and in addition to raw speed, energy efficiency will be aided by that upgrade as well, which means that the Pixel 9a may not offer weaker battery life than the 8a after all.
If the Pixel 9a ends up being affordable enough, its dubious design choices will undoubtedly be forgiven.
The dual camera setup sitting flush on the Pixel 9a‘s back, meanwhile, needs a big sensor boost to make up for that dubious design change, which… may or may not happen. The 120Hz refresh rate-capable OLED display is very likely to go largely unchanged (as there’s not a lot of room left for improvement in the mid-range segment), and if the 8GB RAM count and entry-level 128GB storage option are also not revised, perhaps a price cut is possible.