Skip to main content

Google might be making Gemini more child-friendly

Android figurine holding a balloon in the shape of the Gemini logo at MWC 2025
Nirave Gondhia / Digital Trends

Code snippets within the Google app have revealed that the company is working on a version of its Gemini AI model for kids. It looks like this model would help kids with their homework and generate stories.

Android Authority found this code during an APK teardown, and the following strings make it pretty clear what’s going on:

  • assistant_scrappy_welcome_screen_title_for_kid_users
  • assistant_welcome_screen_description_for_kid_users
  • Create stories, ask questions, get homework help, and more.
  • assistant_welcome_screen_footer_for_kid_users
  • assistant_welcome_screen_title_for_kid_users
Recommended Videos

Google hasn’t announced anything about this publicly, so we have no idea how far along the development is or how likely it is to get launched. The strings also include a data usage disclaimer written in simple language, clearly aimed at younger readers:

Google will process your data as described in the Google Privacy Policy and the Gemini Apps Privacy Notice. Gemini isn't human and can make mistakes, including about people, so double check it.

Since the strings don’t allude to any new abilities — Gemini can already help with homework and generate stories — the main feature of this new model will likely be parental controls. It would also make sense if the model was pre-trained on special prompt and response pairs aimed at children. This would help it respond better to childlike language and make sure its own responses are written in a child-friendly way.

It might also have different rules compared to other Gemini models, dictating what kinds of topics it should avoid and what kinds of prompts it should refuse. Gemini already has some guardrails in place for teen users, detailed on its safety page, but younger children will likely require even more safeguards.

We don’t know yet if this version of Gemini will be packaged as its own product, but one of the strings mentions “Assistant Scrappy” — could this be some kind of persona or name for the model? Or does it just mean something technical that I’m not aware of? We don’t have any answers yet, but Google has been launching new features for Gemini at break-neck speed lately, so maybe we’ll find out soon.

Willow Roberts
Willow Roberts has been a Computing Writer at Digital Trends for a year and has been writing for about a decade. She has a…
Google is testing a new refresh shortcut for AI Mode
Google AI Mode for Search.

Google’s new AI Mode for search may soon get an update to make the feature easier to navigate after users input a query. 

The Gemini 2.0-powered AI-search function is an elevated search experience, providing a mix of contextual AI Overviews and relevant search links. Currently, Google has made AI Mode available to its Google One AI Premium subscribers as a preview. However, the brand may soon expand availability to free users, while also making it easier to reset an AI Mode conversation and remain on the same page. 

Read more
Google launches Gemini 2.5 Pro, its ‘most intelligent AI model’ yet
Google's Gemini logo with the AI running on a smartphone and a PC.

In a blog post today, Google announced Gemini 2.5 Pro (experimental) for developers and Advanced subscribers, aiming to help you tackle increasingly complex problems. It's the first in the family and set up to "think" before it speaks.

Google says it'll be available today in Google AI Studio (its developer platform) and for Advanced subscribers, with Vertex AI support coming soon. Google also claims to outperform the competition, and that Gemini 2.5 Pro takes the number one spot on the LMArena leaderboard with 18.8%, surpassing other AI models such as ChatGPT and Deepseek.

Read more
Gemini’s rumored video generation could be here soon
Google Gemini on an iPhone.

For several months now, Google Gemini has teased generative video capabilities, but the latest beta suggests those features are closer than ever. In Google app beta 16.11, Android Authority's Abner Li found several strings that reveal a few details about the upcoming video generation features.

The first is a string that says "Get high-quality videos with Veo 2, Gemini's latest video generation model." Veo promises to create an eight-second video in about two minutes based on your idea. All users have to do is describe their vision in a few sentences. Don't get too excited, though; it seems there will be usage limits, so you aren't going to be creating feature-length films just yet.

Read more