(Credit: Google/PCMag)
Nowadays, seemingly every smartphone update promises to automate our lives with artificial intelligence. However, the most impressive feature in Google's upcoming Android 17 is far more beneficial to humanity. Called Pause Point, this digital well-being tool ignores the AI hype cycle to focus on human psychology, introducing deliberate friction where your bad phone habits live.
Like you, I've experienced the uniquely modern horror of unlocking a phone to check something mundane, like email or the weather, only for my attention to be hijacked by an algorithmic feed that keeps me on the screen for an hour longer than intended. Pause Point, revealed during The Android Show before Google I/O, is designed to tackle this sensory trance at the root. By forcing me to sit through a 10-second breather—prompting me to meditate, view personal photos, or open an ebook—Android 17 effectively intervenes before I get my dopamine fix. This is one of the Android 17 features I'm most excited to test out when the OS launches this summer; it doesn't try to think for me, it just gives me the space to think for myself.

Why I'm Looking Forward to Pause Point
Over the years, conventional phone app blockers have failed me due to their all-or-nothing approach. They've attempted to curb my negative phone habits through either draconian lockouts or easily bypassed restrictions that I could easily ignore with a tap of a button. For example, I once used AppBlock's Strict Mode, which prevented me from tweaking phone settings, deleting the app, or bypassing the restrictions until the lockdown timer expired. To work on Android, AppBlock completely locks down a phone’s system settings so you can't force-close it. While that brute-force lockdown is great for self-control, it's extremely annoying when I genuinely needed to change a setting—like connecting to the Wi-Fi at my parents' place. I could tweak the settings beforehand to allowlist essential controls, but negotiating with an app just to use my phone feels less like self-improvement and more like a hostage situation.
Pause Point flips this dynamic by intercepting doomscrolling before it even starts; it's a potential digital slap on the wrist before my fingers can reach the algorithmic cookie jar. Here's how it works, according to Google: When you tap a self-designated "distracting" app, Android doesn't launch it immediately. Instead, it triggers a mandatory 10-second delay, serving as a psychological circuit breaker that stops the dopamine fix in its tracks. In essence, Pause Point forces you to ask yourself, "Do I really need to open this right now?"
During this 10-second delay, Pause Point offers active, mindful alternatives. These include guided breathing exercises, setting a session timer for the app, viewing a slideshow of personal photos, or tapping shortcuts to healthier apps. I appreciate this "smell the roses" approach because it's not so extreme as to lock down the phone entirely. However, it puts my doomscrolling inclinations into perspective. A photo of my daughter or my family on vacation could be the splash of cold water I need to put the phone down and focus on what's important. That would be the perfect opportunity to play with my kids, get up and stretch, or maybe bust out an illustration app like Procreate to brush up on my drawing technique. There's always something more productive I can be doing than doomscrolling.
Pause Point May Save Me From Myself
Although Google hasn't revealed a definitive list of apps that Pause Point is compatible with, I assume that, as a system-level feature, it should work with everything on my phone. Off the top of my head, Instagram and YouTube's never-ending feeds of short-form videos are perfect Pause Point candidates as they suck up a surprising amount of my time. In addition, I have a particularly bad habit of grinding out all my game dailies after dinner, so Genshin Impact and Wuthering Waves might get the Pause Point treatment once Android 17 is available. I also relish a bit of online drama, so infinite-scroll social media apps like Bluesky and X are on my Pause Point short list, too.
Deleting these outright isn't an ideal solution; there's still educational and social value in apps like YouTube and X. Deleting them cuts me off from genuine work and entertainment utility. I want something to curb my habits, not potentially force me to look for some time-wasting distraction elsewhere. Knowing that those apps are still technically available to me if I really put in the work to access them sounds like a smart way to stave off withdrawal.
You see, Pause Point's genius lies in the deliberate friction it creates between you and your bad habits. For example, I can admit that I always press snooze on an alarm when given the chance. Pause Point potentially won't let me do that. Once Pause Point's enabled, Android 17 forces a full smartphone reboot if you ever want to turn it off again. This bypass is deliberately inconvenient, ensuring you make the calculated, frustrating choice to give up on your focus goal. It's yet another celever, sobering trick to help me put my time and energy into perspective, which is ultimately all I really need.
Why Pause Point Matters
Pause Point is poised to be a refreshing victory from a user-experience perspective. It's a shining example that tech companies don't need massive, energy-hungry AI models to solve real-world problems. Sometimes taking a break can help you go further in life, and it seems Google is applying that philosophy to digital wellbeing. I'm looking forward to the relief it will bring me from doomscroll boredom when it launches this summer.


