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Home Android

My favorite Gemini alternative isn’t ChatGPT or Copilot; it’s way more productive

July 12, 2026
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I have tried almost every major AI assistant on my phone, and for the longest time, Gemini felt like the obvious choice on Android.

However, I wanted to try the competition. ChatGPT and Copilot are great in their own way, but Claude quietly became my favorite alternative.

Its mobile experience feels calm, polished, and useful for the kind of work I do every day.


Google Gemini is awesome, but it needs to copy these features from ChatGPT

Why ChatGPT still feels more complete

Claude feels better for actual thinking

A screenshot showing Claude giving answer
A screenshot showing Claude answer on Android

This is where Claude started pulling ahead for me.

Gemini is excellent when I want quick Android actions, and ChatGPT is still the more versatile all-rounder.

But when I am on my phone and trying to think through an idea, Claude feels different.

It doesn’t just throw an answer at me. It helps me slow down, organize my thoughts, and turn a rough idea into something I can actually use.

Claude is unusually good at understanding what I am trying to say, even when my input is incomplete.

Its writing quality is the biggest reason I keep coming back. When I gave it a complex prompt to write a business email, it nailed the answer on the first try.

It understands flow, tone, and nuance better than most assistants I have used.

This is also where Copilot usually loses me.

Copilot can be useful, especially if you live inside Microsoft services, but its responses often feel stiff and robotic to me (I’m not a fan of its fonts either).

Claude’s Android app has covered the basics

A screenshot showing projects for Claude on Android
A screenshot showing project details for Claude

Anthropic has done a solid job covering the basics that matter on a phone. Unlike Copilot, I don’t feel like I am using a half-baked mobile companion.

The Android app feels complete enough for daily use, and that is a big reason why it has stayed on my home screen.

The biggest convenience is that I can set Claude as my default assistant and access it from the power button.

I can create Projects, keep related files together, and avoid starting from scratch every time.

Model selection is another underrated advantage. I can switch between Claude models depending on the task.

If I need a quick response, I don’t have to use the heaviest model and burn my credits.

If I am rewriting, analyzing, or thinking through a complex draft, I can move to a more capable one.

Then there are the smaller touches that add up.

Incognito chat is useful when I don’t want a conversation saved or used as part of my workflow.

The 2×2 home screen widget is another favorite because it lets me fire off a query quickly without opening the full app first.

Claude may not be the most deeply integrated Android assistant, but the app has reached a point where the fundamentals are strong.

Claude’s coding capabilities are unmatched

A screenshot showing Claude code on desktop

Claude’s coding capabilities won’t matter much to casual users who only want quick answers and summaries, but for developers, this is where Claude becomes a different beast.

Claude Code (powered by Fable 5) is easily one of the strongest AI coding tools I have used.

I recently gave Claude Code a complex and long prompt to create a website, and it handled the job in style. It didn’t just dump a basic layout and call it a day.

The structure, typography, UI, and implementation quality all felt like they came from a developer with years of experience.

Claude Cowork is another feature that makes the desktop experience more powerful.

It can automate local tasks, work through implementation steps, and help me move faster without switching context.

Claude Code and Cowork are two areas where Claude pulls ahead of ChatGPT (and Copilot).


Illustration showing the Gemini logo at the center, surrounded by Gmail, Docs, restaurant, and Google travel icons.


I found a Gemini feature so good, I deleted a bunch of apps

Get ready for a cleaner home screen

It works with all my favorite third-party apps

A screenshot showing connectors in Claude code
A screenshot showing apps supported for Claude

The other reason why Claude feels more useful to me is how it fits into the rest of my workflow. I don’t live inside one ecosystem anymore.

I use tools like Asana, Figma, Adobe, Google services, and Canva in my workflow.

And the good news is that Claude works well with all these services.

I can summon the assistant and ask it to review my design, fetch an email, or summarize a Google Docs document, and it does the job without breaking a sweat.

That flexibility matters because my productivity setup isn’t clean or simple.

One project may start as a rough note, move into Asana, pick up screenshots from Canva, include design references from Figma, and end with a discussion in Slack.

Claude makes it easier to connect these pieces mentally and turn them into action.

A smarter way to get things done

Claude won me over because it doesn’t try to be everywhere on my phone. It simply gets the core experience right.

Gemini still has the Android advantage, and it’s good enough for casual users.

But if you are a power user or a developer, and want to get the best out of your $20, you can’t go wrong with Claude.

That being said, I can’t wait to see the upcoming rollout of Gemini 3.5 (Pro). It will be interesting to see how Google’s latest iteration compares against Claude Fable 5.

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