← All ReviewsPixel 11 Pro XL 'Kodiak' First Look: Leaked Case Reveals Refined, Not Reinvented, Flagship

Pixel 11 Pro XL 'Kodiak' First Look: Leaked Case Reveals Refined, Not Reinvented, Flagship

WaitGadgets~$800 (estimated)Published April 2, 2026
7
/ 10

Verdict

Promising internal upgrades, but wait for confirmed specs, real-world benchmarks, and hands-on camera samples before committing $800 to an incremental design refresh.

Best for: Pixel loyalists who want a meaningful internal upgrade at a competitive $800 price point, especially those frustrated by Tensor thermal issues and Samsung modem connectivity problems in previous models.

Skip if: You want a visually fresh design for 2026, need the largest possible display (6.3 inches is smaller than the competition), or cannot wait for confirmed specs before making a decision. Also skip if you are coming from a Pixel 10 Pro XL, as the upgrade is likely minimal.

Pros

  • Tensor G6 on TSMC process should finally fix thermal and efficiency issues that plagued earlier Tensor chips
  • Titan M3 security chip is a meaningful upgrade for privacy-focused users
  • MediaTek M9 modem replacing Samsung's should improve signal reliability
  • Slimmer camera bar and reduced bezels give a cleaner look
  • Competitive $800 price point for a flagship if specs hold

Cons

  • Design is barely distinguishable from Pixel 9 and 10, disappointing for a 10th-anniversary device
  • Removal of camera bar cover could reintroduce lens flare problems
  • Still based on leaks and case renders, not confirmed final hardware
  • No indication of meaningful camera sensor upgrades yet
  • 12GB RAM (expected) is adequate but not class-leading in 2026

Red Flags

  • All details are based on leaks and case renders, not confirmed final hardware
  • Removal of camera bar cover may reintroduce lens flare issues seen in older Pixels
  • No confirmed camera sensor upgrades for a camera-first brand
  • Tensor G6 performance claims are unverified until independent benchmarks

A 10th Anniversary That Plays It Safe

When Apple hit its 10th iPhone anniversary, it delivered the iPhone X, a device that completely reimagined the product line. Google, reaching the same milestone with the Pixel 11 Pro XL, has apparently decided to go the other way: keep the outside familiar and pour the innovation budget into internals. Whether that is refreshingly practical or disappointingly cautious depends entirely on what you want from a flagship phone in 2026.

The leaked 'Kodiak' case renders confirm a design that is, frankly, hard to distinguish from the Pixel 9 Pro XL or Pixel 10 Pro XL at a glance. The camera bar is still there. The overall silhouette is still there. Google is sticking to its 2-3 year external design cycle, and the Pixel 11 falls squarely in the 'refinement' phase rather than the 'reinvention' phase.

What the Leak Actually Tells Us

The case leak and associated reporting from Geeky Gadgets confirm several details worth unpacking:

  • Slimmer camera bar: The camera bar cover has been removed, resulting in a cleaner back panel. This is a visual improvement, but it raises a practical concern. Earlier Pixel models suffered from lens flare issues, and removing the protective cover could make that worse. Google presumably has a solution, but we have not seen it yet.
  • Thinner bezels: The 6.3-inch display gets slightly thinner bezels, giving the front a more modern look. Not a dramatic change, but a welcome one.
  • Marginal thickness increase: The phone is reportedly very slightly thicker. This likely accommodates internal changes and possibly a larger battery, though battery capacity has not been confirmed.

The Real Story: Tensor G6

The most important upgrade here is not visible at all. The Tensor G6 chip, built on TSMC's advanced process node (widely expected to be a 2nm-class process), represents a potential turning point for Google's custom silicon.

Let's be blunt: the Tensor G3 through G5 had real problems. They ran hot, they throttled under sustained loads, and their power efficiency lagged behind Qualcomm's Snapdragon offerings. The root cause was Samsung's foundry process, which simply could not match TSMC's yields and thermal characteristics.

The move to TSMC should address all three issues simultaneously. If the Tensor G6 delivers on its promise, the Pixel 11 Pro XL could finally compete head-to-head with the Snapdragon 8 Elite Gen 2 in sustained workloads. That is a big "if," and we will not know for certain until independent benchmarks arrive after launch. But the foundry switch alone makes this the most consequential Tensor upgrade since the chip line launched.

Security and Connectivity Upgrades

Two other internal changes deserve attention:

Titan M3 security chip: Google's dedicated security module gets a generational upgrade. For users who prioritize data protection (and in 2026, that should be everyone), this is a meaningful improvement. The Titan M series handles sensitive operations like encryption key storage and secure boot verification independently from the main processor, reducing the attack surface significantly.

MediaTek M9 modem: Google is dropping Samsung's modems in favor of MediaTek's M9. Samsung's modems were another weak link in previous Pixels, with users reporting poor signal strength and inconsistent connectivity. MediaTek's modem division has improved considerably, and the M9 should bring the Pixel's connectivity closer to what iPhone and Galaxy users experience. This is one of those changes that most reviewers will gloss over, but it could be one of the most noticeable day-to-day improvements.

Specs Comparison

FeaturePixel 11 Pro XLGalaxy S26 UltraiPhone 17 Pro Max
ChipsetTensor G6 (TSMC)Snapdragon 8 Elite Gen 2A19 Pro
Display6.3"6.9"6.9"
SecurityTitan M3Knox VaultSecure Enclave
Price~$800~$1,300~$1,199
ModemMediaTek M9Snapdragon X80Apple custom 5G

What We Do Not Know Yet

This is a leak-based first look, and several critical details are still missing:

  • Camera sensors: No confirmed information about new sensors, lenses, or computational photography improvements. Camera quality is the single biggest reason people buy Pixels. Until we know what Google has done here, any purchase decision is premature.
  • Battery capacity: The slight thickness increase hints at a bigger battery, but nothing is confirmed.
  • AI features: Google will almost certainly highlight new Gemini-powered on-device AI capabilities. These could be the defining feature of the Pixel 11 series, but we have seen nothing specific yet.
  • Actual Tensor G6 benchmarks: The TSMC move should help, but until independent testing confirms it, this is still a promise.

The Honest Take

At approximately $800, the Pixel 11 Pro XL is positioned well below the Galaxy S26 Ultra and iPhone 17 Pro Max. If the Tensor G6 delivers on its TSMC promise, and if the camera system sees meaningful upgrades (even computational ones), this could be the best value flagship of 2026.

But "could be" is doing a lot of heavy lifting in that sentence. Right now, all we have is a case leak and some chipset details. The design is safe to the point of being forgettable. The camera bar redesign is minor. And Google's track record with Tensor thermals means the G6 needs to prove itself before earning trust.

This is not a phone to pre-order based on leaks. It is a phone to watch closely and evaluate when real reviews arrive in August.

Specifications

ChipsetTensor G6 (TSMC 2nm-class process, estimated)
SecurityTitan M3 dedicated security chip
ModemMediaTek M9
Display6.3-inch (exact panel specs TBC)
RAM12GB (expected, unconfirmed)
Storage128GB / 256GB / 512GB (expected)
Price~$800 (estimated)
LaunchAugust 2026
OSAndroid 17 (expected)

Comparison

ProductPriceKey SpecVerdict
Google Pixel 11 Pro XL~$800Tensor G6, Titan M3, 6.3" displayWait for real-world testing
Samsung Galaxy S26 Ultra~$1,300Snapdragon 8 Elite Gen 2, 6.9" displayPricier but proven performance
iPhone 17 Pro Max~$1,199A19 Pro, 6.9" displayPremium price, polished ecosystem
OnePlus 14 Pro~$900Snapdragon 8 Elite Gen 2, 6.8" displayStrong value flagship alternative