Zero Android App – Full User Flow Library

Explore the Zero Android app through recorded user flows and Material Design screen captures. See how Zero designs its Google Play experience, from onboarding to core features.

Zero Android App — Full Flow Documentation

The Zero Android app is documented across every major user flow in the Page Flows library. On this page you'll find recordings of how Zero onboards new users, handles its core interactions, and structures settings — all captured from the live Google Play version of the app.

How Zero Adapts for Android Users

Android is a distinct design context from iOS: Material Design patterns, back-button behavior, system-level gestures, and device fragmentation all shape how an app looks and feels. Zero's Android design reflects those constraints, and studying it here shows how the brand adapts its experience for Android users specifically.

For Teams Benchmarking Zero on Android

This reference is especially useful if you're designing Android-first or cross-platform, and want to benchmark against Zero without mistakenly using its iOS version as the basis. Every recording is current, tagged, and organized so you can get to the flow you need in seconds.

Frequently Asked Questions

How does the Zero Android app differ from its iOS version?

Android versions often use different navigation patterns, Material Design components, and back-button behaviors. If Zero is also in our iOS library, you can directly compare to see the platform-specific adaptations.

What Android-specific patterns does Zero use?

Each flow captures Zero's use of Material Design elements — bottom sheets, snackbars, FABs, navigation drawers — where applicable, along with any custom Android patterns the brand has built.

Is Zero captured on a specific Android device?

Most Android recordings are captured on recent Pixel devices to show a stock Android reference. The patterns apply broadly across manufacturers.

How current is the Zero Android documentation?

Recordings are updated when Zero ships significant redesigns, so you're studying current Android UX rather than outdated versions of the app.