Stay organized with collections
Save and categorize content based on your preferences.
This guide describes how to use the Friends APIs in
Android Studio projects.
Load friends
You can retrieve and display (in the game) a list of players who are friends
with the current user. As a user, it is possible to control which games have
access to the friends list. When you retrieve the friends list, you must handle
the case where permission is required. This is all encapsulated in the API to
make requesting access and subsequently using the friends list a straightforward
task. To load the friends list, follow these steps:
If the call is successful (the user already granted access to the friends
list), Google Play Games Services returns an annotated
PlayerBuffer
that represents the user's friends.
If the player needs to grant access to the friends list, the call fails with
a
FriendsResolutionRequiredException.
No dialogs are shown yet.
This exception contains an Intent that triggers a dialog to ask the
player for consent. You can launch this Intent immediately to open a
consent dialog. You can only use this Intent once.
If the result of the Intent’s activity is Activity.RESULT_OK, then
consent was granted. Call loadFriends() again to return the friends
list. If the result is Activity.RESULT_CANCELLED, the user did
not consent and loadFriends() will continue to return
FriendsResolutionRequiredException.
The following code shows how to load the friends list:
// Attempt loading friends.// Register a success listener to handle the successfully loaded friends list.// Register a failure listener to handle asking for permission to access the list.PlayGames.getPlayersClient(this).loadFriends(PAGE_SIZE,/* forceReload= */false).addOnSuccessListener(newOnSuccessListener<AnnotatedData<PlayerBuffer>>(){@OverridepublicvoidonSuccess(AnnotatedData<PlayerBuffer>data){PlayerBufferplayerBuffer=data.get();// ...}).addOnFailureListener(exception->{if(exceptioninstanceofFriendsResolutionRequiredException){PendingIntentpendingIntent=((FriendsResolutionRequiredException)task.getException()).getResolution();parentActivity.startIntentSenderForResult(pendingIntent.getIntentSender(),/* requestCode */SHOW_SHARING_FRIENDS_CONSENT,/* fillInIntent */null,/* flagsMask */0,/* flagsValues */0,/* extraFlags */0,/* options */null);}});return;}
The following code shows how to handle the result from the request for consent:
/** Handle the activity result from the request for consent. */@OverridepublicvoidonActivityResult(intrequestCode,intresult,Intentdata){if(requestCode==SHOW_SHARING_FRIENDS_CONSENT){if(result==Activity.RESULT_OK){// We got consent from the user to access their friends. Retry loading the friendscallLoadFriends();}else{// User did not grant consent.}}}
View another player’s profile
You can display a view of another player’s Play Games profile from
within your game. This view allows players to send and accept friend invitations
for the player being viewed. This view does not require access to the friends
list. Additionally, if your game has its own concept of player names separate
from Play Games Gamer IDs, you can pass these along to the profile view
so that they can be included in any friend invitations for additional context.
To show another player’s profile, follow these steps:
If the call is successful, Google Play Games Services returns an Intent that
will display a screen where the user can compare themselves against another
player's profile.
Use the Intent from the previous step to start an activity.
// Retrieve and launch an Intent to show a player profile within the game.PlayGames.getPlayersClient(this).getCompareProfileIntent(otherPlayerId).addOnSuccessListener(newOnSuccessListener<Intent>(){@OverridepublicvoidonSuccess(Intentintent){startActivityForResult(intent,RC_SHOW_PROFILE);// ...}});
If the game has its own name for players, these can be added to the API call.
This enables Play Games to set the nickname of players who send friend
invitations from within your game to "<game-specific-name> from
<your-game-name>" Play Games automatically appends "from
<your-game-name>"):
// Show a player profile within the game, with additional hints containing the// game-specific names for both players.// - otherPlayerId is the Play Games playerId of the player to view.// - otherPlayerInGameName is the game-specific name of the player being viewed.// - currentPlayerInGameName is the game-specific name of the player who is signed// in. Hence if the player sends an invitation to the profile they are viewing,// their game-specific name can be included.PlayGames.PlayersClient(this).getCompareProfileIntentWithAlternativeNameHints(otherPlayerId,otherPlayerInGameName,currentPlayerInGameName).addOnSuccessListener(newOnSuccessListener<Intent>(){@OverridepublicvoidonSuccess(Intentintent){startActivityForResult(intent,RC_SHOW_PROFILE);// ...}});
Content and code samples on this page are subject to the licenses described in the Content License. Java and OpenJDK are trademarks or registered trademarks of Oracle and/or its affiliates.
Last updated 2025-01-30 UTC.
[[["Easy to understand","easyToUnderstand","thumb-up"],["Solved my problem","solvedMyProblem","thumb-up"],["Other","otherUp","thumb-up"]],[["Missing the information I need","missingTheInformationINeed","thumb-down"],["Too complicated / too many steps","tooComplicatedTooManySteps","thumb-down"],["Out of date","outOfDate","thumb-down"],["Samples / code issue","samplesCodeIssue","thumb-down"],["Other","otherDown","thumb-down"]],["Last updated 2025-01-30 UTC."],[],[],null,["# Friends in Android games\n\n| **Note:** This guide is for the Play Games Services v2 SDK. For information on the previous version of this SDK, see the [Play Games Services v1\n| documentation](/games/pgs/v1/android/friends).\n\nThis guide describes how to use the [Friends](/games/pgs/friends) APIs in\nAndroid Studio projects.\n\nLoad friends\n------------\n\nYou can retrieve and display (in the game) a list of players who are friends\nwith the current user. As a user, it is possible to control which games have\naccess to the friends list. When you retrieve the friends list, you must handle\nthe case where permission is required. This is all encapsulated in the API to\nmake requesting access and subsequently using the friends list a straightforward\ntask. To load the friends list, follow these steps:\n\n1. Call the [`PlayersClient.loadFriends()`](https://developers.google.com/android/reference/com/google/android/gms/games/PlayersClient#loadFriends(int,%20boolean)) method, which is an asynchronous call returning a [`Task`](https://developers.google.com/android/reference/com/google/android/gms/tasks/Task) object.\n2. If the call is successful (the user already granted access to the friends list), Google Play Games Services returns an annotated [`PlayerBuffer`](https://developers.google.com/android/reference/com/google/android/gms/games/PlayerBuffer) that represents the user's friends.\n3. If the player needs to grant access to the friends list, the call fails with\n a\n [`FriendsResolutionRequiredException`](https://developers.google.com/android/reference/com/google/android/gms/games/FriendsResolutionRequiredException).\n No dialogs are shown yet.\n\n 1. This exception contains an `Intent` that triggers a dialog to ask the player for consent. You can launch this `Intent` immediately to open a consent dialog. You can only use this `Intent` once.\n 2. If the result of the `Intent`'s activity is `Activity.RESULT_OK`, then\n consent was granted. Call `loadFriends()` again to return the friends\n list. If the result is `Activity.RESULT_CANCELLED`, the user did\n not consent and `loadFriends()` will continue to return\n `FriendsResolutionRequiredException`.\n\n | **Note:** If you call `loadFriends()` from your server and determine that you need to request consent, you need to call `loadFriends()` again from your game client. This second call won't succeed, but it will provide you the `Intent` required to show the consent dialog.\n\nThe following code shows how to load the friends list: \n\n // Attempt loading friends.\n // Register a success listener to handle the successfully loaded friends list.\n // Register a failure listener to handle asking for permission to access the list.\n PlayGames.getPlayersClient(this)\n .loadFriends(PAGE_SIZE, /* forceReload= */ false)\n .addOnSuccessListener(\n new OnSuccessListener\u003cAnnotatedData\u003cPlayerBuffer\u003e\u003e() {\n @Override\n public void onSuccess(AnnotatedData\u003cPlayerBuffer\u003e data) {\n PlayerBuffer playerBuffer = data.get();\n // ...\n })\n\n .addOnFailureListener(\n exception -\u003e {\n if (exception instanceof FriendsResolutionRequiredException) {\n PendingIntent pendingIntent =\n ((FriendsResolutionRequiredException) task.getException())\n .getResolution();\n parentActivity.startIntentSenderForResult(\n pendingIntent.getIntentSender(),\n /* requestCode */ SHOW_SHARING_FRIENDS_CONSENT,\n /* fillInIntent */ null,\n /* flagsMask */ 0,\n /* flagsValues */ 0,\n /* extraFlags */ 0,\n /* options */ null);\n }\n });\n return;\n }\n\nThe following code shows how to handle the result from the request for consent: \n\n /** Handle the activity result from the request for consent. */\n @Override\n public void onActivityResult(int requestCode, int result, Intent data) {\n if (requestCode == SHOW_SHARING_FRIENDS_CONSENT) {\n if (result == Activity.RESULT_OK) {\n // We got consent from the user to access their friends. Retry loading the friends\n callLoadFriends();\n } else {\n // User did not grant consent.\n }\n }\n }\n\nView another player's profile\n-----------------------------\n\nYou can display a view of another player's Play Games profile from\nwithin your game. This view allows players to send and accept friend invitations\nfor the player being viewed. This view does not require access to the friends\nlist. Additionally, if your game has its own concept of player names separate\nfrom Play Games Gamer IDs, you can pass these along to the profile view\nso that they can be included in any friend invitations for additional context.\n\nTo show another player's profile, follow these steps:\n\n1. Call the [`PlayersClient.getCompareProfileIntent()`](https://developers.google.com/android/reference/com/google/android/gms/games/PlayersClient) method, which is an asynchronous call returning a [`Task`](https://developers.google.com/android/reference/com/google/android/gms/tasks/Task) object.\n2. If the call is successful, Google Play Games Services returns an Intent that will display a screen where the user can compare themselves against another player's profile.\n3. Use the `Intent` from the previous step to start an activity.\n\n // Retrieve and launch an Intent to show a player profile within the game.\n PlayGames.getPlayersClient(this)\n .getCompareProfileIntent(otherPlayerId)\n .addOnSuccessListener(new OnSuccessListener\u003cIntent\u003e() {\n @Override\n public void onSuccess(Intent intent) {\n startActivityForResult(intent, RC_SHOW_PROFILE);\n // ...\n }});\n\nIf the game has its own name for players, these can be added to the API call.\nThis enables Play Games to set the nickname of players who send friend\ninvitations from within your game to \"\\\u003cgame-specific-name\\\u003e from\n\\\u003cyour-game-name\\\u003e\" Play Games automatically appends \"from\n\\\u003cyour-game-name\\\u003e\"): \n\n // Show a player profile within the game, with additional hints containing the\n // game-specific names for both players.\n // - otherPlayerId is the Play Games playerId of the player to view.\n // - otherPlayerInGameName is the game-specific name of the player being viewed.\n // - currentPlayerInGameName is the game-specific name of the player who is signed\n // in. Hence if the player sends an invitation to the profile they are viewing,\n // their game-specific name can be included.\n PlayGames.PlayersClient(this)\n .getCompareProfileIntentWithAlternativeNameHints(otherPlayerId, otherPlayerInGameName, currentPlayerInGameName)\n .addOnSuccessListener(new OnSuccessListener\u003cIntent\u003e() {\n @Override\n public void onSuccess(Intent intent) {\n startActivityForResult(intent, RC_SHOW_PROFILE);\n // ...\n }});"]]