Gemini AI wants to be your new mobile gaming coach
It lets you instantly record screen, a shortcut for streaming live on YouTube, and access to achievements and stats.

Google wants to be your new gaming buddy, and it’s bringing Gemini along for the ride.
The company just unveiled Play Games Sidekick, a floating in-game overlay that sneaks Google’s AI into your mobile adventures.
Think of it as a helpful little tab that lives inside games downloaded from the Play Store, offering everything from quick screenshots to on-demand Gemini tips.
By default, Sidekick is a Swiss Army knife of gamer utilities: instant screen recording, a shortcut for streaming live on YouTube, and access to achievements and stats without leaving the action.
But the real star is Gemini Live, which you can summon with a big, friendly button.
In Google’s demo, Gemini acted like a chatty game guide, serving up starter strategies for The Battle of Polytopia, cracking so-bad-they’re-good jokes, and even understanding vague commands thanks to screen sharing.
Just pointing at “that thing” on-screen was enough for Gemini to get the hint.
It’s not about to replace a detailed Reddit walkthrough, but if you just need a quick answer or a strategy boost, Sidekick beats frantic Googling mid-match.
The concept isn’t totally new. Microsoft is testing a similar Gaming Copilot, but Google’s pitch is a softer sell.
The overlay can be dismissed entirely, and Gemini features will only roll out to “select games” over the coming months, starting with titles from partners like EA and NetMarble (Star Wars Galaxy of Heroes, FC Mobile, Solo Leveling Arise).
Sidekick is only part of Google’s bigger play to make Android gaming feel more like an actual platform.
A new platform-level gaming profile will track stats and achievements across Android and PC, generate AI-powered profile pics, and let you follow friends or stalk their gaming habits.
Play Store forums are also coming, so players can trade tips without leaving the app.
Google Play Games for PC is finally graduating from beta, meaning Google isn’t just chasing mobile gamers anymore.
Will Google’s Play Games Sidekick with AI coaching actually enhance the mobile gaming experience, or is this just another attempt to insert AI into spaces where it might not be needed? Do you think having Gemini as a gaming assistant represents genuine value for players, or could it potentially reduce the satisfaction that comes from figuring out games independently? Tell us below in the comments, or reach us via our Twitter or Facebook.
