Google’s New ‘Dreambeans’ App Creates Personalized AI Stories From Your Digital Life

Google’s New ‘Dreambeans’ App Creates Personalized AI Stories From Your Digital Life

Dreambeans brand logo alongside a mobile application mockup featuring an illustrated pet story titled What to expect for Boba's first week home.

Image: Google

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Aminu Abdullahi
Aminu Abdullahi
Jun 4, 2026
2 minute read
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Google is brewing your life into a daily dose of AI stories.

The tech giant has launched Dreambeans, a new experimental app from Google Labs that uses artificial intelligence to create personalized daily stories from information across a user's Google account.

The app is designed as an alternative to the endless scrolling common on social media and content platforms. Instead of serving an infinite feed, Dreambeans generates a limited collection of stories each day based on information from connected Google services.

According to Google, the goal is to help users discover ideas, activities, and information that matter to them without getting trapped in a never-ending stream of content.

How it works

Dreambeans draws on Google’s Personal Intelligence system, pulling context from apps like Gmail, Calendar, Photos, YouTube, and Search history.

Each story is visually crafted using Google’s Nano Banana 2 AI model. If a story involves you or people you know, the app can use Google Photos to render likenesses in the illustrations rather than stock imagery, giving the experience a personalized touch.

Stories can include lifestyle suggestions, news highlights, travel tips, or reminders about events you might enjoy. Users can also dive deeper into stories, with the app linking to web resources for next steps, such as finding a local dog park or signing up for a class. Feedback on recommendations improves future stories, and favorites can be saved to a personal library.

Designed as an antidote to doomscrolling

One of Dreambeans' key ideas is limiting how much content users receive each day.

Rather than offering an endless stream of recommendations, the app typically generates between 10 and 14 stories daily, according to TechCrunch. Google says the finite format is intended to help people discover useful information and then move on with their day.

Product lead Gozde Oznur explained the philosophy behind the approach, telling TechCrunch: "The idea is to get a few inspirational ideas and then go out and live your life."

Users can also save stories to a personal library and provide feedback on recommendations, helping the app refine future story collections.

Dreambeans requires at least one connected app to function, but users can choose which services to link. Google emphasizes that choices made in Dreambeans do not affect settings in other AI products, such as Gemini Apps or AI Mode. Users also have full control over their data and can delete it at any time.

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Limited rollout begins

Dreambeans is rolling out starting this week to eligible Google AI Ultra subscribers aged 18 and older in the United States on Android and iOS. Users who do not currently have access can join a waitlist through Google Labs using a personal Google account.

Also read: Alphabet plans to raise $80 billion for AI infrastructure as Google expands consumer and enterprise AI services.


Aminu Abdullahi

Aminu Abdullahi is an experienced B2B technology and finance writer and award-winning public speaker. He is the co-author of the e-book, The Ultimate Creativity Playbook, and has written for various publications, including TechRepublic, eWEEK, Enterprise Networking Planet, eSecurity Planet, CIO Insight, Enterprise Storage Forum, IT Business Edge, Webopedia, Software Pundit, Geekflare and more.

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