The Pixel 6a is getting a new fingerprint sensor, wider 14-country rollout

The Pixel 6a.

Enlarge / The Pixel 6a. (credit: Google)

The Pixel 6a is shaping up to be one of the most promising smartphone releases of the year. With a flagship-class system on a chip and a $450 price tag, it looks like Google is taking a credible swing at the iPhone SE. Since Thursday's announcement, a few more details have come out that didn't make the keynote.

First off, the Pixel 6a will be Google's widest smartphone release ever, by a small margin. Remember, the Pixel 5a release was Google's smallest ever, launching in just two countries, the US and Japan. Google's device availability support page was updated Thursday, and the Pixel 6a is back up to the usual 13 Pixel launch countries: Australia, Canada, France, Germany, Ireland, Italy, Japan, Puerto Rico, Singapore, Spain, Taiwan, United Kingdom, and United States.

But wait! There's more: Google also says the Pixel 6a will be coming to India later this year, bringing it to 14 countries. That's a new record for Google's comparatively small (Apple and Samsung ship in 100-plus countries) phone hardware operation. India is a strange choice since it's one of the most competitive global smartphone markets. Google will need to significantly drop the price of the Pixel 6a to be competitive there. We don't know the India price yet, but check out the replies to that tweet announcement, which is full of Indian consumers already dragging the phone for its assumed $450 price tag and being "only" 60 Hz. It's going to be a tough battle.

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