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When I look at the detailed statistics for my app, namely "Current installs by device" filter, I can see sections: top 10, staged rollout, beta and alpha.

I am not sure what does the term Staged rollout refer to?

It's even more strange because there are no builds I pushed yesterday and today (reasonable for today). Could this be a number of builds which were being sent to users' devices? If you remember, when you publish the app, a user does not get notified immediately, but after a few days. Google probably makes priority based on app's population.

PS. I've asked this on Android Enthusiasts, but they told me that this is a question concerned developers. If you think that SO is the wrong place for this question, please suggest where I should post it.

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You can release an app update to production using a staged rollout, where you release an app update to a percentage of your users and increase the percentage over time.

New and existing users are eligible for to receive updates from staged rollouts. Staged rollouts can only be used for app updates, not when publishing an app for the first time.

When you increase the percentage of a staged rollout, your original group of users who are eligible to receive the APK is always included. If you upload a new APK to an existing staged rollout, your original group stays the same. When you create a brand new staged rollout, your staged rollout starts with a new user group.

During a staged rollout, it's a good idea to closely monitor crash reports and user feedback. Users receiving the staged rollout can leave public reviews on Google Play.

Reference: https://support.google.com/googleplay/android-developer/answer/3131213

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  • WOW! How I had not seen this before?! I was releasing updates to everyone thinking that's the only way. What's worse, I've been monitoring Android Developer for each post and have never read about staged rollouts. Thanks a lot!
    – sandalone
    Apr 29, 2015 at 15:55
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    You're welcome! This announcement was made at Google I/O 2013 as part of a series of Google Play Developer Console updates, which included tips on how to optimize apps, an integrated app translation service, usage metrics and referral tracking, and beta testing.
    – aygul
    Apr 29, 2015 at 16:02
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    And if user didn't receive an update durin a staged rollout, is it possible to enter the google play and update it manually?
    – mes
    Jan 22, 2016 at 7:40
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    @mes I don't think so. Just now one of my devices updated an app, but the others not. If I browse the Play Store, I only see the old version. The new one is apparently visible only to the selected users in the staged release. Oct 26, 2016 at 9:26
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    Let's say roll out for 20% when these 20% users updated their app, would it increment automatically until 100%? Or we must increment it manually? Nov 21, 2017 at 15:09

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