What you need to know
- Nothing’s new Playground tool lets users build simple Android apps using AI, without needing any coding knowledge.
- Playground creates mini apps based on text prompts, turning ideas into working apps in just a few minutes.
- The feature is currently in beta and exclusive to the Nothing Phone 3, with a wider rollout planned later.
If you’ve ever opened the Google Play Store hoping to find the exact app you need, only to be disappointed that it doesn’t exist or is buried under thousands of ads, you can now build your own app without knowing how to code, thanks to Nothing’s new Playground tool.
Think of it like explaining an image prompt to Gemini, but instead of generating an image, Playground creates a functional app.
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Create apps shaped exactly around your specific needs and context.That’s what Essential Apps are.You describe what you need. AI builds it. It appears on your phone’s home screen, ready to use.One billion apps for one billion people.Beta starts today on Nothing Playground. pic.twitter.com/tgqi0aq64rFebruary 10, 2026
In one example shared on X, Nothing showed a user asking Playground to build an app that looks at their calendar, weather, and training plan, then suggests the best time to work out. The tool generated a fully working app tailored to that request in just a few minutes.
Nothing says you can build, update, and add features to apps, or even roll back to previous versions using Playground. For now, the tool is available in beta and is exclusive to the Nothing Phone 3. The company says Playground will eventually expand to Essential Apps and roll out to other Nothing and CMF devices running Nothing OS 4.0 or newer.
(Image credit: Nothing)
Since Playground is still in its early stages, Essential Apps can currently request only three permissions: location, calendar, and contacts. Nothing says a later February OS update will add support for activity recognition, sensor data, and a dedicated Weather API.
Support for custom app icons, audio, and fonts is also planned. Nothing also says that Essential Apps will move to a public release later this year once stability improves.
You can already try building your own apps by visiting Nothing’s Playground website and signing in. There are also plenty of apps created by other users that you can download and experiment with right now.
Android Central’s Take
Building my own app is something I’ve wanted to do for a long time, but I have never learned how to code. Nothing is not promising full-scale app development using AI alone, and you would still need tools like Codex or Cursor for that. But for niche, purpose-built mini apps, the idea behind Playground sounds genuinely exciting.
Nothing says not every app needs to solve a problem for everyone, and the goal of Essential Apps is to let users build exactly what they need for themselves. That idea feels genuinely useful, and in my opinion, it is far more practical than many of the AI tools we have seen so far.

