Google is working on an Android feature to reduce motion sickness while using your phone

Google is working on a native fix for one of the most annoying parts of using a phone: getting carsick while doom-scrolling in the back of an Uber. The feature, currently called Motion Cues, looks like it will drop in a future update – probably Android 17 – and it’s all about making it easier to read or watch videos without your stomach turning.

What Google Is Working On

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What happened: Motion Cues is Google’s attempt to fix “sensory conflict.” That’s the fancy term for what happens when your eyes tell your brain you are sitting still (staring at a screen), but your inner ear screams that you are moving (bouncing around in a car). The disconnect makes you nauseous. Google’s fix adds little animated dots to the edges of your screen that move in sync with the vehicle. By giving your eyes a visual reference that matches the motion your body feels, it tricks your brain into chilling out.

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It’s not a brand-new concept. Apple added something similar, “Vehicle Motion Cues,” in iOS 18, and an Android app called KineStop has been doing this since 2018. But Google wants to bake it directly into the OS so you don’t need third-party tools.

Code sleuths found Motion Cues hiding in recent Android Canary builds, but it’s currently turned off. Right now, the test version has a major flaw: it uses a standard overlay, meaning the dots disappear if you pull down your notifications, open Settings, or look at the lock screen. That kind of defeats the purpose if the “cure” vanishes half the time you use your phone.

Why This Matters and What Comes Next

Why this is important: It looks like Google is fixing that overlay problem by building a dedicated Motion Cues API right into SystemUI – the core part of Android that handles the status bar and navigation. This is a big deal because it bypasses the usual security rules that stop apps from drawing over sensitive screens. By moving it to the system level, those motion dots will stay visible no matter what you are doing on your phone.

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They are also keeping a tight leash on it. Only privileged system apps will get the keys to this API, so you don’t have to worry about random spammy apps taking over your screen. It creates a dedicated, safe lane for accessibility features.

Why you should care: If you are the type of person who has to put the phone away immediately when the car starts moving, this is a game-changer. It could mean finally being able to finish a text, read an article, or watch YouTube on a commute without feeling like you need a barf bag. It turns dead time in transit into actual usable time.

What’s next: Since this requires deep changes to the operating system, it likely needs a full OS upgrade. We might see it sneak into a late Android 16 update, but Android 17 feels like the safer bet. When it does launch, don’t be surprised if Google rebrands it to something like “Motion Assist” and bundles it with the rumored Transiting mode, which automatically tweaks your phone when it detects you are traveling. Until then, you can grab KineStop from the Play Store if you need relief right now.

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