Floating memory bubbles on Motorola phones
Bubbles In Time brings a floating memory layer to Motorola phones: photos, videos, and saved messages drift over whatever you're doing and open with a tap. Here's how it behaves on the Edge and G series, and how to set it up in minutes.
How it works on Motorola phones
Bubbles In Time uses Android's standard draw-over-apps permission, which near-stock Moto Android exposes in Settings during the app's first-run setup. Grant it once and memory bubbles can drift over your home screen, messaging, and social apps on the Edge and G series — without stealing focus from typing or playback. Appearance frequency is yours to set, from every 30 minutes to every 4 hours, and Android's own minimum-interval rules keep the layer light on battery.
Making it feel native on near-stock Moto Android
Because the bubble is now Android's own language — Android 17 made floating App Bubbles its headline multitasking feature — a memory bubble on Motorola phones feels like part of the system rather than a gimmick. The difference is what's inside: instead of another app icon, it's a photo from this month three years ago, a video of your kid, or a message thread you saved because it mattered. The Mystery Photo option keeps one surprise in the rotation.
Setup in five minutes
Install from Google Play ($2.99, once — no subscription, no ads, no account). Open the app, add your first memories from your photo library, allow the overlay permission when near-stock Moto Android asks, choose a frequency, and enable Floating Bubbles. From that moment, Motorola phones does something no stock gallery does: it hands your past back to you during ordinary moments, entirely on-device.
Quick answers
Does Bubbles In Time work on the Edge and G series?
Yes — Bubbles In Time runs on modern Android phones including the Edge and G series, using the standard display-over-apps permission.
Will bubbles interfere with near-stock Moto Android gestures or typing?
No. Bubbles float without taking focus; tap to open a memory, dismiss to continue what you were doing.
Does it need an account or upload photos?
No account, no uploads — memories stay on your device, and the Play listing declares no data shared.