Google Pixel 11 Pro Design Leaked Ahead Of Launch: New Camera Bar Design, Tensor G6, MediaTek Modem Expected
The Google Pixel 11 Pro has now surfaced in its first set of renders, giving an early look at what the next flagship might bring. The images, shared by tipster @OneLeaks, suggest that Google isn’t making a drastic visual shift this time, but there are a few noticeable tweaks.

At first glance, the design still looks very much like a Pixel. Flat sides remain, and the overall shape feels familiar. The main change seems to be around the camera bar, which appears larger but slightly thinner, now finished in a single camera glass.
The base Pixel 11 renders also leaked yesterday, which you can check out here. And for the Pixel 11 Pro Fold, go here.
Design And Display Details
Based on the leak, the Pixel 11 Pro is said to measure 152.7 x 71.8 x 8.4mm. That’s close to the Pixel 10 Pro, and it lines up with reports that the phone could retain a 6.3-inch OLED display.
So if you were expecting a major size change, that doesn’t seem to be happening here.
New Chip And Internal Changes
Under the hood, the Pixel 11 Pro is said to be powered by Google’s upcoming Tensor G6 chip. According to the leak, this could be a 7-core processor built on TSMC’s 2nm process.
There’s also talk of a shift in connectivity. Google may move away from Samsung’s modem and introduce a new MediaTek M90 modem instead.
Security could see an upgrade as well. The phone is expected to include a new Titan M3 coprocessor, codenamed “Google Epic,” replacing the Titan M2 used in previous models.
Memory, Storage And Software
The leak suggests the phone may continue with 16GB of RAM. On the storage side, there’s a possibility that the base variant could start at 256GB instead of 128GB.
The Pixel 11 Pro is also expected to run Android 17 out of the box, aligning with Google’s usual software rollout timeline.
Camera And Video Features
There are also a few early hints around camera capabilities.
One of the more interesting mentions is an ultra-low-light video mode that processes footage directly on the device, without relying on an internet connection. There’s also talk of Cinematic Blur support at 4K 30fps, along with up to 100x zoom using updated telephoto hardware and machine learning.
Another feature that could be coming is a video relight option, allowing users to adjust lighting conditions after capturing footage.
Expected Launch Timeline
The Pixel 11 series is expected to launch in August, following a similar schedule to last year’s lineup.


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