Gemini 2.5 Flash Image

(developers.googleblog.com)

720 points | by meetpateltech 10 hours ago ago

354 comments

  • fariszr 8 hours ago

    This is the gpt 4 moment for image editing models. Nano banana aka gemini 2.5 flash is insanely good. It made a 171 elo point jump in lmarena!

    Just search nano banana on Twitter to see the crazy results. An example. https://x.com/D_studioproject/status/1958019251178267111

    • qingcharles 7 hours ago

      I've been testing it for several weeks. It can produce results that are truly epic, but it's still a case of rerolling the prompt a dozen times to get an image you can use. It's not God. It's definitely an enormous step though, and totally SOTA.

      • spaceman_2020 7 hours ago

        If you compare to the amount of effort required in Photoshop to achieve the same results, still a vast improvement

        • qingcharles 6 hours ago

          I work in Photoshop all day, and I 100% agree. Also, I just retried a task that wouldn't work last night on nano-banana and it worked first time on the released model, so I'm wondering if there were some changes to the released version?

          • spaceman_2020 3 hours ago

            We had an exhibition some time back where I used AI to generate the posters for our product. This is a side project and not something we do seriously, but the results were outstanding - better than what the majority of much bigger exhibitors had.

            It took me a LOT of time to get things right, but if I was to get an actual studio to make those images, it would have cost me a thousands of dollars

        • echelon 5 hours ago

          Vibe coding might not be real, but vibe graphics design certainly is.

          https://imgur.com/a/internet-DWzJ26B

          Anyone can make images and video now.

          • lebimas 3 hours ago

            What tools did you use to make those videos from the PG image?

            • echelon 3 hours ago

              I used a bunch of models in conjunction:

              - Midjourney (background)

              - Qwen Image (restyle PG)

              - Gemini 2.5 Flash (editing in PG)

              - Gemini 2.5 Flash (adding YC logo)

              - Kling Pro (animation)

              I didn't spend too much time correcting mistakes.

              I used a desktop model aggregation and canvas tool that I wrote [1] to iterate and structure the work. I'll be open sourcing it soon.

              [1] https://getartcraft.com

          • spaceman_2020 3 hours ago

            Midjourney with style references is just about the easiest way right now for an absolute noob to get good aesthetics

      • druskacik 7 hours ago

        Is it because the model is not good enough at following the prompt, or because the prompt is unclear?

        Something similar has been the case with text models. People write vague instructions and are dissatisfied when the model does not correctly guess their intentions. With image models it's even harder for model to guess it right without enough details.

        • toddmorey 5 hours ago

          Remember in image editing, the source image itself is a huge part of the prompt, and that's often the source of the ambiguity. The model may clearly understand your prompt to change the color of a shirt, but struggle to understand the boundaries of the shirt. I was just struggling to use AI to edit an image where the model really wanted the hat in the image to be the hair of the person wearing it. My guess for that bias is that it had just been trained on more faces without hats than with them on.

        • qingcharles 6 hours ago

          No, my prompts are very, very clear. It just won't follow them sometimes. Also this model seems to prefer shorter prompts, in my experience.

      • ericlang 5 hours ago

        How did you get early access? Thanks.

        • Thorrez 2 hours ago

          I believe lmarena.

    • dcre 8 hours ago

      Alarming hands on the third one: it can't decide which way they're facing. But Gemini didn't introduce that, it's there in the base image.

      • 725686 4 hours ago

        Yes, the base image's hands are creepy.

        • meatmanek an hour ago

          I noticed the AI pattern on the sunglasses first. I guess all of the source images are AI-generated? In a sense, that makes the result slightly less impressive -- is it going to be as faithful to the original image when the input isn't already a highly likely output for an AI model? Were the input images generated with the same model that's being used to manipulate them?

    • ceroxylon 8 hours ago

      It seems like every combination of "nano banana" is registered as a domain with their own unique UI for image generation... are these all middle actors playing credit arbitrage using a popular model name?

      • bonoboTP 8 hours ago

        I'd assume they are just fake, take your money and use a different model under the hood. Because they already existed before the public release. I doubt that their backend rolled the dice on LMArena until nano-banana popped up. And that was the only way to use it until today.

        • ceroxylon 8 hours ago

          Agreed, I didn't mean to imply that they were even attempting to run the actual nano banana, even through LMarena.

          There is a whole spectrum of potential sketchiness to explore with these, since I see a few "sign in with Google" buttons that remind me of phishing landing pages.

      • vunderba 7 hours ago

        They're almost all scams. Nano banana AI image generator sites were showing up when this model was still only available in LM Arena.

    • torginus 4 hours ago

      Another nitpick - the pink puffer jacket that got edited into the picture is not the same as the one in the reference image - it's very similar but if I were to use this model for product placement, or cared about these sort of details, I'd definitely have issues with this.

    • hapticmonkey 2 hours ago

      Before AI, people complained that Google was taking world class engineering talent and using it for little more than selling people ads.

      But look at that example. With this new frontier of AI, that world class engineering talent can finally be put to use…for product placement. We’ve come so far.

    • summerlight 5 hours ago

      I wonder how the creative workflow looks like when this kind of models are natively integrated into digital image tools. Imagine fine-grained controls on each layer and their composition with the semantic understanding on the full picture.

    • koakuma-chan 8 hours ago

      Why is it called nano banana?

      • ehsankia 7 hours ago

        Before a model is announced, they use codenames on the arenas. If you look online, you can see people posting about new secret models and people trying to guess whose model it is.

      • Jensson 8 hours ago

        Engineers often have silly project names internally, then some marketing team rewrites the name for public release.

      • ZephyrBlu 7 hours ago

        I'm pretty sure it's because an image of a banana under a microscope generated by the model went super viral

    • rplnt 7 hours ago

      Oh no, even more mis-scaled product images.

    • ivape 3 hours ago

      Regardless, it seems Google is on the frontier of every type of model and robotics (cars). It’s nutty how we forget what a intellectual juggernaut they are.

      • fariszr 3 hours ago

        Tool use and sycophancy are still big issues in gemini 2.5 models.

    • 93po 6 hours ago

      Completely agree - I make logos for my github projects for fun, and the last time I tried SOTA image generation for logos, it was consistently ignoring instructions and not doing anything close to what i was asking for. Google's new release today did it near flawlessly, exactly how I wanted it, in a single prompt. A couple more prompts for tweaking (centering it, rotating it slightly) got it perfect. This is awesome.

    • torginus 3 hours ago

      No, it's not really that much of an improvement. Once you start coming up with specific tasks, it fails just like the others.

    • fHr 3 hours ago

      cope

    • echelon 8 hours ago

      > This is the gpt 4 moment for image editing models.

      No it's not.

      We've had rich editing capabilities since gpt-image-1, this is just faster and looks better than the (endearingly? called) "piss filter".

      Flux Kontext, SeedEdit, and Qwen Edit are all also image editing models that are robustly capable. Qwen Edit especially.

      Flux Kontext and Qwen are also possible to fine tune and run locally.

      Qwen (and its video gen sister Wan) are also Apache licensed. It's hard not to cheer Alibaba on given how open they are compared to their competitors.

      We've left the days of Dall-E, Stable Diffusion, and Midjourney of "prompt-only" text to image generation.

      It's also looking like tools like ComfyUI are less and less necessary as those capabilities are moving into the model layer itself.

      • raincole 8 hours ago

        In other words, this is the gpt 4 moment for image editing models.

        Gpt4 isn't "fundamentally different" from gpt3.5. It's just better. That's the exact point the parent commenter was trying to make.

        • jug 3 hours ago

          I'd say it's more like comparing Sonnet 3.5 to Sonnet 4. GPT-4 was a rather fundamental improvement. It jumped to professional applications compared to the only causal use you could use ChatGPT 3.5 for.

        • retinaros 8 hours ago

          did you see the generated pic demis posted on X? it looks like slop from 2 years ago. https://x.com/demishassabis/status/1960355658059891018

          • raincole 8 hours ago

            I've tested it on Google AI Studio since it's available to me (which is just a few hours so take it with a grain of salt). The prompt comprehension is uncannily good.

            My test is going to https://unsplash.com/s/photos/random and pick two random images, send them both and "integrate the subject from the second image into the first image" as the prompt. I think Gemini 2.5 is doing far better than ChatGPT (admittedly ChatGPT was the trailblazer on this path). FluxKontext seems unable to do that at all. Not sure if I were using it wrong, but it always only considers one image at a time for me.

            Edit: Honestly it might not be the 'gpt4 moment." It's better at combining multiple images, but now I don't think it's better at understanding elaborated text prompt than ChatGPT.

      • fariszr 3 hours ago

        I'm sorry I absolutely don't agree. This model is on a whole other level.

        It's not even close. https://twitter.com/fareszr/status/1960436757822103721

      • krackers 5 hours ago

        I'm confused as well, I thought gpt-image could already do most of these things, but I guess the key difference is that gpt-image is not good for single point edits. In terms of "wow" factor it doesn't feel as big as gpt 3->4 though, since it sure _felt_ like models could already do this.

        • echelon 5 hours ago

          People really slept on gpt-image-1 and were too busy making Miyazaki/Ghibli images.

          I feel like most of the people on HN are paying attention to LLMs and missing out on all the crazy stuff happening with images and videos.

          LLMs might be a bubble, but images and video are not. We're going to have entire world simulation in a few years.

  • vunderba 7 hours ago

    I've updated the GenAI Image comparison site (which focuses heavily on strict text-to-image prompt adherence) to reflect the new Google Gemini 2.5 Flash model (aka nano-banana).

    https://genai-showdown.specr.net

    This model gets 8 of the 12 prompts correct and easily comes within striking distance of the best-in-class models Imagen and gpt-image-1 and is a significant upgrade over the old Gemini Flash 2.0 model. The reigning champ, gpt-image-1, only manages to edge out Flash 2.5 on the maze and 9-pointed star.

    What's honestly most astonishing to me is how long gpt-image-1 has remained at the top of the class - closing in on half a year which is basically a lifetime in this field. Though fair warning, gpt-image-1 is borderline useless as an "editor" since it almost always changes the whole image instead of doing localized inpainting-style edits like Kontext, Qwen, or Nano-Banana.

    Comparison of gpt-image-1, flash, and imagen.

    https://genai-showdown.specr.net?models=OPENAI_4O%2CIMAGEN_4...

    • bla3 4 hours ago

      Why do Hunyuan, OpenAI 4o and Gwen get a pass for the octopus test? They don't cover "each tentacle", just some. And midjourney covers 9 of 8 arms with sock puppets.

      • vunderba 4 hours ago

        Good point. I probably need to adjust the success pass ratios to be a bit stricter, especially as the models get better.

        > midjourney covers 9 of 8 arms with sock puppets.

        Midjourney is shown as a fail so I'm not sure what your point is. And those don't even look remotely close to sock puppets, they resemble stockings at best.

    • cubefox 6 minutes ago

      What's interesting is that Imagen 4 and Gemini 2.5 Flash Image look suspiciously similar in several of these tests cases. Maybe Gemini 2.5 Flash first calls Imagen in the background to get a detailed baseline image (diffusion models are good at this) and then Gemini edits the resulting image for better prompt adherence.

    • bn-l 6 hours ago

      You need a separate benchmark for editing of course

    • gundmc 6 hours ago

      > Though fair warning, gpt-image-1 is borderline useless as an "editor" since it almost always changes the whole image instead of doing localized inpainting-style edits like Kontext, Qwen, or Nano-Banana.

      Came into this thread looking for this post. It's a great way to compare prompt adherence across models. Have you considered adding editing capabilities in a similar way given the recent trend of inpainting-style prompting?

      • vunderba 4 hours ago

        Adding a separate section for image editing capabilities is a great idea.

        I've done some experimentation with Qwen and Kontext and been pretty impressed, but it would be nice to see some side by sides now that we have essentially three models that are capable of highly localized in-painting without affecting the rest of the image.

        https://mordenstar.com/blog/edits-with-kontext

    • jay_kyburz 2 hours ago

      I really like your site.

      Do you know of any similar sites that that compares how well the various models can adhere to a style guide? Perhaps you could add this?

      I.e. pride the model with a collection of drawings in a single style, then follow prompts and generate images in the same style?

      For example if you wanted to illustrate a book, and have all the illustrations look like they were from the same artists.

  • minimaxir 2 hours ago

    There is one thing Gemini 2.5 Flash Image can do that no other edit model can do: incorporate multiple images simultaneously without shenanigans due to its multimodality, e.g. for Flux Kontext, if you want to "put the person in the first image into the second image", you have to concatenate them pre-VAE which can be unwieldly, but this model doesn't have that issue. You can even incorporate more than two images, but that may cause too much chaos.

    In quick testing, prompt adherence does appear to be much better for massive prompt and the syntatic sugar does appear to be more effective. And there are other tricks not covered which I suspect may allow more control, but I'm still testing.

    Given that generations are at the same price as its competitors, this model will shake things up.

    • blinding-streak an hour ago

      I very much enjoy this feature. My next door neighbor is on vacation, and I'm feeding his fish for him. I took a picture of the fish tank and asked Gemini to put the fish tank at various local tourist attractions in my city, as if we're going on day trips.

      I send him one photo a day and he's been loving it. Just a fun little thing to put a smile on his face (and mine).

  • carlosbaraza 2 hours ago

    Unfortunately, it suffers from the same safetyism than other many releases. Half of the prompts get rejected. How can you have character consistency if the model is forbidden from editing any human. And most of my photo editing involves humans, so basically this is just a useless product. I get that Google doesn't want to be responsible for deep fake advances, but that seems inevitable, so this is just slightly delaying progress. Eventually we will have to face it and allow for society to adapt.

    This trend of tools that point a finger at you and set guardrails is quite frustrating. We might need a new OSS movement to regain our freedom.

    • Workaccount2 2 hours ago

      I have an old photo of my girlfriend with her cousin when they were young, wearing Christmas dresses in front of the tree, not long before they were separated to other sides of the world for decades now. The photo is itself low quality on top of the photo itself being physically beat up.

      So far no model is willing to clean it up :/

      • gaudystead 3 minutes ago

        There are reddit communities (I admittedly don't remember which, but could probably be found from a simple search) where people will offer their photo editing skills to touch up the photo, often for free. Could be worth trying a real human if the robots are going full HAL 9000 and telling you they can't do it.

    • mudkipdev 2 hours ago

      I was using Veo two days ago when video generations were free. I removed all words that sounded even remotely bad, but it still refused. Eventually gave up but now I'm thinking it's because I tried to generate myself

  • greatgib 2 hours ago

       All images created or edited with Gemini 2.5 Flash Image will include an invisible SynthID digital watermark, so they can be identified as AI-generated or edited.
    
    Obviously I understand what is the purpose and the good intention, but I think sad to see that we are not not anymore responsible adults but big corps deciding for us what we can and what we cannot do. Snitching on your back.
    • brokencode an hour ago

      At what point in time were we ever responsible adults with technology?

      Deepfakes have the potential to totally destroy the average person’s already tenuous connection with reality outside of their immediate vicinity.

      Some will be fooled by an endless stream of fakes and others will never believe anything again.

      Politicians will dismiss footage of them doing or saying something bad as fake. And many times, they’ll be telling the truth.

      We are already living in a post-fact world to some extent, but buckle up, because it’s about to get a lot worse.

    • kiratp 19 minutes ago
    • LZ_Khan 2 hours ago

      I don't see the problem as it's not like you're forced to use their image generation model.

    • cl0ckt0wer 2 hours ago

      dont worry, you can just screenshot the image to get rid of the watermark

  • notsylver 8 hours ago

    I digitised our family photos but a lot of them were damaged (shifted colours, spills, fingerprints on film, spots) that are difficult to correct for so many images. I've been waiting for image gen to catch up enough to be able to repair them all in bulk without changing details, especially faces. This looks very good at restoring images without altering details or adding them where they are missing, so it might finally be time.

    • Almondsetat 8 hours ago

      All of the defects you have listed can be automatically fixed by using a film scanner with ICE and a software that automatically performs the scan and the restoration like Vuescan. Feeding hundreds (thousands?) of photos to an experimental proprietary cloud AI that will give you back subpar compressed pictures with who knows how many strange artifacts seems unnecessary

      • notsylver 8 hours ago

        I scanned everything into 48-bit RAW and treat those as the originals, including the IR scan for ICE and a lower quality scan of the metadata. The problem is sharing them - important images I manually repair and export as JPEG which is time consuming (15-30 minutes per image, there are about 14000 total) so if its "generic family gathering picture #8228" I would rather let AI repair it, assuming it doesn't butcher faces and other important details. Until then I made a script that exports the raws with basic cropping and colour correction but it can't fix the colours which is the biggest issue.

        • wingworks 4 hours ago

          How did you get the 49bit and ICE data separately? Did you double scan everything?

          I'm scanning my parents photos at the moment.

        • exe34 6 hours ago

          this reminds me of a joke we used to tell as kids when there was a new Photoshop version coming out - "this one will remove the cow from the picture and we'll finally see what great-grandpa looked like!"

      • wingworks 3 hours ago

        Vuescan is terrible. SilverFast has better defaults. But nothing beats the orig Nikon scan software when using ICE. It does a great job of removing dust, fingerprints etc Even when you zoom in. VS what iSRD does in SilverFast, which if you zoom in and compare the 2. iSRD kinda smooches/blurs the infrared defects whereas Nikon Scan clones the surrounding parts, which usually looks very good when zooming in.

        Both Silverfast and Nikon Scan methods look great when zoomed out. I never tried Vuescan's infrared option. I just felt the positive colors it produced looks wrong/"dead".

    • bjackman 6 hours ago

      I don't really understand the point of this usecase. Like, can't you also imagine what the photos might look like without the damage? Same with AI upscaling in phone cameras... if I want a hypothetical idea of what something in the distance might look like, I can just... imagine it?

      I think we will eventually have AI based tools that are just doing what a skilled human user would do in Photoshop, via tool-use. This would make sense to me. But just having AI generate a new image with imagined details just seems like waste of time.

      • bibabaloo 22 minutes ago

        Why take photos at all if you can just imagine them?

      • w4yai 5 hours ago

        Not everyone has a great imagination.

      • Filligree 4 hours ago

        Read up on aphantasia.

    • zwog 8 hours ago

      Do you happen to know some software to repair/improve video files? I'm in the process of digitalizing a couple of Video 2000 and VHS casettes of childhood memories of my mom who start suffering from dementia. I have a pretty streamlined setup for digitalizing the videos but I'd like to improve the quality a bit.

      • nycdatasci 7 hours ago

        I've used products from topazlabs.com for the same problem and have generally been happy with them.

        • qingcharles 7 hours ago

          Topaz is probably the SOTA in video restoration, but it can definitely fuck shit up. Use carefully and sparingly and check all the output for weird AI glitches.

      • notsylver 8 hours ago

        I didn't do any videos, just pictures, but considering how little I found for pictures I doubt you'll find much

      • actionfromafar 7 hours ago

        VHSdecode if you want a rabbit hole.

    • Barbing 8 hours ago

      Hope it works well for you!

      In my eyes, one specific example they show (“Prompt: Restore photo”) deeply AI-ifies the woman’s face. Sure it’ll improve over time of course.

      • notsylver 7 hours ago

        I tried a dozen or so images. For some it definitely failed (altering details, leaving damage behind, needing a second attempt to get a better result) but on others it did great. With a human in the loop approving the AI version or marking it for manual correction I think it would save a lot of time.

        This is the first image I tried:

        https://i.imgur.com/MXgthty.jpeg (before)

        https://i.imgur.com/Y5lGcnx.png (after)

        Sure, I could manually correct that quite easily and would do a better job, but that image is not important to us, it would just be nicer to have it than not.

        I'll probably wait for the next version of this model before committing to doing it, but its exciting that we're almost there.

        • qingcharles 7 hours ago

          Being pragmatic, the after is a good restoration. There is nothing really lost (except some sharpness that could be put back). The main failing of AI is on faces because our brains are so hardwired to see any changes or weirdness. This is the sort of image that is perfect for AI because the subject's face is already occluded.

      • indigodaddy 8 hours ago

        Another question/concern for me: if I restore an old picture of my Gramma, will my Gramma (or a Gramma that looks strikingly similar) ever pop up on other people's "give me a random Gramma" prompts?

    • danielbln 8 hours ago

      That time had arrived a few months ago already with Flux Kontext (https://bfl.ai/models/flux-kontext).

    • reaperducer 7 hours ago

      I've been waiting for image gen to catch up enough to be able to repair them all in bulk without changing details, especially faces.

      I've been waiting for that, too. But I'm also not interesting in feeding my entire extended family's visual history into Google for it to monetize. It's wrong for me to violate their privacy that way, and also creepy to me.

      Am I correct to worry that any pictures I send into this system will be used for "training?" Is my concern overblown, or should I keep waiting for AI on local hardware to get better?

      • Zopieux 2 hours ago

        You're looking for Flux Kontext, a model you can run yourself offline on a high end consumer GPU. Performance and accuracy are okay, not groundbreaking, but probably enough for many needs.

  • skybrian 7 hours ago

    Like most image generators, it didn’t pass the piano keyboard test. (Black keys are wrong.)

    https://aistudio.google.com/app/prompts?state=%7B%22ids%22:%...

    • joombaga 7 hours ago

      What is the piano keyboard test? Your link requires granting AI Studio access to Google Drive, which I do not want to do.

      • raincole 7 hours ago

        Just ask it to generate a correct piano keyboard. It's something the current gen of image generator AIs fail at.

        • ZiiS 4 hours ago

          Do most humans pass?

          • raincole 3 hours ago

            Most humans fail at 4 digits multiplication, or drawing a cube in perspective.

          • phainopepla2 4 hours ago

            Presumably most humans with a camera do

          • adzm 4 hours ago

            2-2-1-2-2-2-1

            • polynomial 4 hours ago

              I still feel like most humans would fail, haha.

    • pbhjpbhj 6 hours ago

      Are their models that have vector space that includes ideas, not just words/media but not entirely corporeal aspects?

      So when generating a video of someone playing a keyboard the model would incorporate the idea of repeating groups of 8 tones, which is a fixed ideational aspect which might not be strongly represented in words adjacent to "piano".

      It seems like models need help with knowing what should be static, or homomorphic, across or within images associated with the same word vectors and that words alone don't provide a strong enough basis [*1] for this.

      *1 - it's so hard to find non-conflicting words, obviously I don't mean basis as in basis vectors, though there is some weak analogy.

    • Workaccount2 6 hours ago

      The selling point of this model really seems to be it's consistency between generations rather than it's raw generating ability.

      for instance:

      https://aistudio.google.com/app/prompts/1gTG-D92MyzSKaKUeBu2...

      • skybrian 4 hours ago

        I can’t see it. You probably need to set permissions to “anyone with the link can access.”

    • conception 2 hours ago

      Failed my horizontal text test as well.

    • mikepurvis 7 hours ago

      Interesting! I feel like that's maybe similar to the business of being able to correctly generate images of text— it looks like the idea of a keyboard to a non-musician, but is immediately wrong to someone who is actually familiar with it at all.

      I wonder if the bot is forced to generate something new— certainly for a prompt like that it would be acceptable to just pick the first result off a google image search and be like "there, there's your picture of a piano keyboard".

    • vunderba 7 hours ago

      Anything that is heavily periodic can definitely trip up image gen - that being I just used Flux Kontext T2I and got a got pretty close (disregard the hammers though since thats a right mess). Only towards the upper register did it start to make mistakes.

      https://imgur.com/a/fyX42my

    • carimura 6 hours ago

      or my "hands with palms facing down" test.... no matter how hard I try it just can't get open hands, palms down.

      • vunderba 6 hours ago

        It's probably just a matter of rerolling a few times. I was able to get it around 25% of the time.

        https://imgur.com/a/H9gH3Zy

      • pbhjpbhj 6 hours ago

        I guess the vast majority of images have the palms the other way, that this biases the output. It's like how we misinterpret images to generate optical illusions, because we're expecting valid 3D structures (Escher's staircases, say).

        • vunderba 6 hours ago

          Yes - it's the same reason generating a 5-leaf clover fails - massive amounts of training data that predisposes the model against it.

    • psbp 7 hours ago

      Doesn't pass the analog clock test either.

    • cubefox 6 hours ago

      Like most image models, except GPT-4o, it also didn't pass the wooden Penrose triangle test. (It creates normal triangles.)

  • crustaceansoup 7 hours ago

    I tried to reproduce the fork/spaghetti example and the fashion bubble example, and neither looks anything like what they present. The outputs are very consistent, too. I am copying/pasting the images out of the advertisement page so they may be lower resolution than the original inputs, but otherwise I'm using the same prompts and getting a wildly different result.

    It does look like I'm using the new model, though. I'm getting image editing results that are well beyond what the old stuff was capable of.

    • mortenjorck 7 hours ago

      The output consistency is interesting. I just went through half a dozen generations of my standard image model challenge, (to date I have yet to see a model that can render piano keyboard octaves correctly, and Gemini 2.5 Flash Image is no different in that regard), and as best I can tell, there are no changes at all between successive attempts: https://g.co/gemini/share/a0e1e264b5e9

      This is in stark contrast to ChatGPT, where an edit prompt typically yields both requested and unrequested changes to the image; here it seems to be neither.

      • BoorishBears 4 hours ago

        Flash 2.0 Image had the same issue: it does better than gpt-image for maintaining consistency in edits, but that also introduces a gap where sometimes it gets "locked in" on a particular reference image and will struggle to make changes to it.

        In some cases you'll pass in multiple images + a prompt and get back something that's almost visually indistinguishable from just one of the images and nothing from the prompt.

    • crustaceansoup 5 hours ago

      Wildly different and subjectively less "presentable", to be clear. The fashion bubble just generates a vague bubble shape with the subject inside it instead of the"subject flying through the sky inside a bubble" presented on the site. The other case just adds the fork to the bowl of spaghetti. Both are reproducible.

      Arguably they follow the prompt better than what Google is showing off, but at the same time look less impressive.

  • __rito__ 7 hours ago

    I am glad that I never decided to become a photoshop pro. I always contemplated about it, seemed attractive for a while, but glad that I decided against it. RIP r/photoshopbattles.

    It was in the endless list of new shiny 'skills' that feels good to have. Now I can use nano-banana instead. Other models will soon follow, I am sure.

    • esafak 6 hours ago

      Retouching is an art. To the pro, this is just another tool to increase efficiency. You pay them not just for knowing how to use Photoshop, but for exercising good judgement. That said, I imagine this will shrink the field, since fewer retouchers will be able to do the same work, unless the amount of work goes up commensurately. Will people get more retouching done if the price goes down? Not sure.

      • neom 4 hours ago

        Especially colouring, In college I worked for a dude who would re-colour old B&Ws for people, 60% the work (the work he enjoyed) was trying to research enough to know reasonably well what colour something actually ought to be, not just what we thought looked good.

    • ctippett 6 hours ago

      Interesting take. I'm a programmer, but learned Photoshop in the early 2000s and had a blast making and editing images for fun. Sure, the generative models today can do a far better job than anything I could come up with, but that doesn't detract from the experience and skills I picked up over the years.

      If anything, knowing Photoshop (I use Affinity Designer/Photo these days) is actually incredibly useful to finesse the output produced by AI. No regrets.

      • polynomial 4 hours ago

        Photoshop was hella fun, turned out that programming paid more. And now AI pays much more.

    • SoKamil 6 hours ago

      If you commented it a decade ago, I would say that at least you own the program and skills in case Google decides to turn off the lights or ask prohibitive price tag. Now you need to pay subscription for PS and maybe there would be some decent open weight model released.

      • stefs 5 hours ago

        qwen3 is open weights and offers passable image generation

    • CuriouslyC 5 hours ago

      it's still a useful skill to know photoshop. AI images can be great but you are almost always going to want to A. create the base composition yourself B. clean up artifacts in the AI generation and C. layer AI compositions into a final work.

    • echelon 7 hours ago

      Programming and everything else will eventually fall to automation, too. It's just a matter of time.

      Engineering probably takes a while (5 years? 10 years?) because errors multiply and technical debt stacks up.

      In images, that's not so much of a big deal. You can re-roll. The context and consequences are small. In programs, bad code leads to an unmaintainable mess and you're stuck with it.

      But eventually this will catch up with us too.

      • quantumHazer 7 hours ago

        Both of you are wrong and this is not good discussion level for HN

        • casey2 6 hours ago

          If being wrong isn't good discussion for HN then they should delete the site

        • echelon 7 hours ago

          I'm unclear as to which side of the argument you're taking.

          If you think that these tools don't automate most existing graphics design work, you're gravely mistaken.

          The question is whether this increases the amount of work to be done because more people suddenly need these skills. I'm of the opinion that this does in fact increase demand. Suddenly your mom and pop plumbing business will want Hollywood level VFX for their ads, and that's just the start.

  • torginus 3 hours ago

    A bit mixed opinions - I tried colorizing manga pages with it, and the results were perfect.

    Interestingly, it can change pages with tons of text on them without any problem, but cannot seem to do translation, if I ask it to translate a French comic page, the text ends up garbled (even though it can perfectly read and translate the text by itself).

    I tried with another page, and it copypasted the same character (in different poses!) all over the panels. Absolutely uncanny!

    However when I asked to remake a Western comic book in a manga style (provided a very similar manga page to the comic one), it totally failed.

    Also about 50% of the time, it just tells me it'll generate the image but doesn't actually do it - not sure what's going on but a retry fixes it, but it's annoying.

  • matsemann 8 hours ago

    Half the time I ask Gemini to generate some image it claims it doesn't have the capability. And in general I've felt it's so hard to actually use the features Google announce? Like, a third of them is in one product, some in another which I can't use, and no idea what or where I should pay to get access. So confusing.

    • Al-Khwarizmi 8 hours ago

      Yeah, in fact the website says "Try it in Gemini" and I'm not sure if I'm already trying it or not - if I choose Gemini 2.5 Flash in the regular Gemini UI, I'm using this?

      • throwup238 8 hours ago

        It’s going to be a messy rollout as usual. The web app (gemini.google.com) shows “Images with Imagen” for me under tools for 2.5 flash but I just tried a few image edits and remixes in the iOS app and it looks like it’s been updated to this model.

      • oliwary 7 hours ago

        Also very confused at this... It told me "I'm unable to create images of specific individuals in different settings." I wish it would at least say somewhere which model we are using at the moment.

      • sega_sai 8 hours ago

        I think not. Because at least in the aistudio there is a dedicated gemini-2.5-flash-image-preview model. So I am assuming it is not available in the standard gemini chat window.

    • jeffbee 6 hours ago

      It's not in the Gemini app or site at all. You have to use AI Studio or another means. Yes, this is all very confusing on Google's part.

  • adidoit 9 hours ago

    Very impressive.

    I have to say while I'm deeply impressed by these text to image models, there's a part of me that's also wary of their impact. Just look at the comments beneath the average Facebook post.

    • postalcoder 8 hours ago

      I have been testing google's SynthID for images and while it isn't perfect, it is very good, insofar that I felt some relief from that same creeping dread over what these images will do to perceived reality.

      It survives a lot of transformation like compression, cropping, and resizing. It even survives over alterations like color filtering and overpainting.

      • sigmar 8 hours ago

        facebook isn't going to implement detection though. Many (if not most) of the viral pictures are AI-generated. and facebook is incentivized to let their users get fooled to generate endless scrolling

        • qingcharles 7 hours ago

          They already did. Certainly on the backend. For a while they were surfacing it, but I think it's gone again. But Meta is definitely onto this.

        • paul7986 8 hours ago

          Along with those being fooled there are many comments saying this is fake, AI trash and etc. That portion of the commenters are teaching the ignorant and soon no one will believe what they see on the Internet as real.

          • bonsai_bar 7 hours ago

            > soon no one will believe what they see on the Internet as real.

            Now is that so bad?

    • MitPitt 8 hours ago

      Facebook comments are obviously botted too

      • bee_rider 7 hours ago

        I dunno, I thought so for a while, but I’m beginning to suspect this is a very optimistic view of humanity.

    • nikanj 8 hours ago

      The comments are probably AI-generated too, because a site that seems to have lots of other people on it is more appealing than an empty wasteland

    • knicholes 9 hours ago

      I got scammed for $15k BTC last weekend during the (failed) SpaceX Launch. I believe the deepfake of Elon and transferred it over. The tech is very convincing, and the attacks ever increasingly sophisticated.

      • yifanl 9 hours ago

        This presumes that you're okay with giving the real Elon your wallet but not a fake Elon, but why?

        • knicholes 4 hours ago

          It was very convincing. We thought it was a YouTube stream of the Starship launch. It paused with 40 seconds remaining, and "Musk" came on offering to reward those who support innovation and technology (BTC, in this case). All info here: https://docs.google.com/document/d/1lRbApgKT4U95zN0AYsPQqsLR...

          • yifanl 3 hours ago

            My problem with your statement isn't if its believable Elon came on stage or not, my problem is why would you trust Elon to pay you your money back, whether its the authentic or imposter Musk.

          • Jordan-117 3 hours ago

            Kind of missing their point there. Giving Elon Musk $15k in crypto based on some vague too-good-to-be-true "trust me bro" pitch is embarrassing even if the video turned out to be real.

            • FergusArgyll an hour ago

              The guy lost 15k there's no need to rub it in!

        • Jensson 8 hours ago

          Because it isn't worth real Elon's time to run these scams.

      • pil0u 6 hours ago

        I got scammed similarly (although $10, because I tested first), because 1. it was on YouTube, on a channel called "SpaceX" with verified logo 2. with hundreds of thousands of viewers live 3. with a believable speech from Mr. Musk standing next to its rockets (and knowing his interest in cryptocurrencies).

        This happened as I was genuinely searching for the actual live stream of SpaceX.

        I am ashamed, even more so because I even posted the live stream link on Hacker News (!). Fortunately it was flagged early and I apologized personally to dang.

        This was a terrible experience for me, on many levels. I never thought I would fall in such a trap, being very aware of the tech, reading about similar stories etc.

        • dvh 6 hours ago

          I am flabbergasted that you both get scammed. I would understand if this was two years ago, but now? Do people really not know about these scams? I can already see down votes coming for victim blaming, but this is to me really shocking. Notice that there isn't "tell hn: don't get scammed by deep fake crypto Elon" because people who usually posts also consider this general knowledge. That's why it's so effective I guess. In a similar manner there will never be "tell hn: don't drink acid it will burn your intestines", the danger is so obvious that nobody feels the need to post it and because nobody is posting it, people get scammed. I don't know what is the solution to that. How should you tell people what everybody should be already knowing?

          I remember being on a machining workshop and he was telling such an obvious things. Obvious things are obvious until they aren't, and then somebody gets hurt.

          • knicholes 4 hours ago

            Yes, I've heard about these scams. I've made deepfakes myself in the past. I've openly mocked people who have fallen for these scams. But this was sophisticated. Perfectly timed, very convincing deepfake, popular YouTube channels showing this stream during the launch, as if it were legit. The website was branded as SpaceX (the domain was obviously not, but I wasn't vigilant in the exciting hullabaloo of the impending launch). The instructions to participate were clear and easy to use.

          • pil0u 6 hours ago

            To be fair, if that was only $10 it's because it was more of a "let's see if that works". It was believable enough to try this out.

            The point of my message was to "tell hn: it could happen to people in this community".

          • bn-l 5 hours ago

            Hey it takes courage to admit to it. That’s admirable.

            • SXX 4 hours ago

              This. Dont be ashamed. Everyone can get scammed.

              Reason people do is because we dont talk of risks often enough.

            • knicholes 4 hours ago

              I am so deeply ashamed.

        • knicholes 4 hours ago

          Yes, this is the exact same scam.

      • fxtentacle 8 hours ago

        Plot twist: It wasn't a deepfake.

        You sent your wallet to the real Elon and he used it as he saw fit. ;)

        • pjerem 8 hours ago

          That’s what they said : they have been scammed !

      • kamranjon 9 hours ago

        Would you consider writing a blog post about this experience? I'm incredibly interested in learning more details about how this unfolded.

        • knicholes 4 hours ago

          Yeah, here it is, along with screenshots. https://docs.google.com/document/d/1lRbApgKT4U95zN0AYsPQqsLR...

        • qingcharles 7 hours ago

          I think the comment is a joke. Their bio is satirical at least :)

          • nerevarthelame 4 hours ago

            Their bio mentions their actual job and one project that is verifiably real. I think that the elements that seem satirical are real projects they're working on.

          • lucasmullens 6 hours ago

            I'm pretty sure the comment wasn't a joke? I saw the stream last week, it was very impressive use of AI, I didn't realize it was AI until he started talking about doubling crypto.

            What about the bio is satirical? I'm pretty sure that's sincere too.

            • qingcharles 5 hours ago

              User has edited their bio now :)

              • knicholes 4 hours ago

                I didn't edit my bio. My projects are not satire. I'm just less ashamed than most, so I work on more "exciting" projects. I've worked extensively with generative AI, including video, myself. It was just that convincing to me in the moment. My regret knows no bounds. Luckily I earn enough this doesn't devastate me, but I really could have done some good with that money.

                • qingcharles 3 hours ago

                  Yikes. In that case, please accept my apology. Your bio disappeared for a while off your page, but it's back as it was now.

        • paul7986 8 hours ago

          Well just go on this guy's lawn and you will find your answer lol

      • Imustaskforhelp 9 hours ago

        Please pardon me since I don't know if this is satirical or not. I'd wish if you could clarify it.

        Because if this is real, then the world is cooked

        if not, then the fact that I think that It might be real but the only reason I believe its a joke is because you are on hackernews so I think that either you are joking or the tech has gotten so convincing that even people on hackernews (which I hold to a fair standard) are getting scammed.

        I have a lot of questions if true and I am sorry for your loss if that's true and this isn't satire but I'd love it if you could tell me if its a satirical joke or not.

        • bauruine 8 hours ago

          I guess it was something like [0] The Nigerian prince is now a deep fake Elon but the concept is the same. You need to send some money to get way more back.

          [0]: https://www.ncsc.admin.ch/ncsc/en/home/aktuell/im-fokus/2023...

          • Imustaskforhelp 8 hours ago

            hm, but isn't it wild thinking that elon is talking to you and asking you for 15k , like bro has the money of his lifetime, why would he ask you?

            It doesn't make that much sense idk

            • atrus 7 hours ago

              I remember watching the SpaceX channel on youtube, which isn't a legit source. AI Elon basically says "I want to help make bitcoin more popular, let me show you how easy it it to transfer money around with btc. Send my $X and I'll send you back $2X! It's very inline with a typical elon message (I'll give you 1 million to vote R), it's on a channel called SpaceX. It's pretty believable.

              Granted I played Runescape and EvE as a kid, so any double-isk scams are immediate redflags.

              • Imustaskforhelp 6 hours ago

                Now I have never played runescape but have heard of this legendary game in references.

                For some reason, my mind confused runescape with neopets from the odd1sout video which I think is a good watch.

                Scams That Should be Illegal : https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XyoBNHqah30

              • empath75 6 hours ago

                It's only believable to the extent that I believe that Musk would actually run such a transparently obvious scam.

            • Jensson 8 hours ago

              Even Elon could lose his credit card or something, the story they spin is always something like that "I am rich but in a pickle, please send some money here and then I'll send you back 10x as much tomorrow when I get back to my account", but of course they never send it back.

              Edit: But of course Elon would call someone he knows rather than a stranger, rich people know a lot of people so of course they would never contact you about this.

          • tantalor 8 hours ago
        • knicholes 4 hours ago

          Not satire. He made a big speech about rewarding those who invested early in tech to move humanity forward and the benefits of the blockchain. It was extremely convincing. Three college grads and a medical doctor were all convinced.

        • runarberg 7 hours ago

          There are a lot of people on the internet, and every individual on the internet is in a unique situation. Chances are some of them are very likely to be persuaded by a scam which seems obvious to you.

          Parent’s story is very believable, even if parent made this particular story up (which I personally don‘t think is the case) this has probably happened to somebody.

          • Imustaskforhelp 6 hours ago

            Ya maybe I didn't get their tone correctly which is why I was actually serious if they were joking or not.

            If they aren't joking, I apologize.

      • jaredklewis 8 hours ago

        This comment is perfect.

        • latchkey 8 hours ago

          As always, it is the replies that make it worth it. GopherGeyser strikes again!

          • knicholes 4 hours ago

            You don't like the idea of GopherGeyser?

            • latchkey 4 hours ago

              What are you talking about? I ordered 10 of them.

              • knicholes 4 hours ago

                You couldn't have-- we sold out and are out of stock redesigning the board to be more usable during configuration and radio control.

                • latchkey 2 hours ago

                  Oh shit, it is a real product? That's amazing.

      • michelb 9 hours ago

        These SpaceX scams are rampant on youtube and highly, highly lucrative. It’s crazy and you have to be very vigilant, as whatever is promised lines up with Elon’s MO.

        • rangerelf 8 hours ago

          Why would anyone give them any money AT ALL?

          It's not like they're poor or struggling.

          Am I missing something?

        • nickthegreek 8 hours ago

          it requires zero vigilance if you dont play the game.

      • lionkor 9 hours ago

        Not to victim-shame or anything, but that sounds more like more than one safety mechanism failed, the convincing tech only being a rather small part of it?

        • knicholes 4 hours ago

          Yes, more than one safety mechanism failed. Coinbase actually flagged the transaction, but I was so desperate to get it to go through, I went through their facial validation process to expedite the transaction. If I hadn't for just a couple more minutes, I'd have realized it was a scam.

        • hansonkd 8 hours ago

          I think the biggest failure is on the part of the companies hosting these streams.

          Its been a while, but I remember seeing streams for Elon offering to "double your bitcoin" and the reasoning was he wanted to increase the adoption and load test the network. Just send some bitcoin to some address and he will send it back double!

          But the thing was it was on youtube. Hosted on an imposter Tesla page. The stream had been going on for hours and had over ten thousand people watching live. If you searched "Elon Musk Bitcoin" During the stream on Google, Google actually pushed that video as the first result.

          Say what you want about the victims of the scam, but I think it should be pretty easy for youtube or other streaming companies to have a simple rule to simply filter all live streams with Elon Musk + (Crypto|BTC|etc) in the title and be able to filter all youtube pages with "Tesla" "SpaceX" etc in the title.

          • lionkor 8 hours ago

            I feel like somehow that would lessen it, but not really help much? There are obviously people with too much money in BTC who are trying to take any gamble to increase its value. It sounds like a deeper societal issue.

            • jfoster 7 hours ago

              You are right that they might never be able to get it to 0, but shouldn't they lessen it if a simple measure like the one described can prevent a bunch of people from getting fooled by the scam?

      • amatajohn 8 hours ago

        the modern turing test:

        am i getting scammed by a billionare or an AI billionaire?

      • AbraKdabra 8 hours ago

        I don't mean to be rude, but this sounds like natural selection doing its work.

        • umbra07 7 hours ago

          That's the sort of statement that remains extremely rude even if you try and prefix it with "I don't mean to be rude".

          • AbraKdabra 6 hours ago

            It's not rude if it's the truth.

            Also he's a troll so...

        • knicholes 4 hours ago

          I'm pretty successful with an above average IQ. It was very convincing, along with three other college grads (one a medical doctor).

      • DonHopkins 7 hours ago

        If you believe anything the actual Elon says, then you have nobody to blame but yourself. That's not a sophisticated attack, you're just extremely gullible.

      • UltraSane 8 hours ago

        On the balance of probabilities it being a scam is vastly more likely than Elon actually wanting to contact you. Why would Elon need $15k in bitcoin?

        It seems like money naturally flows from the gullible to the Machiavellian.

      • pennaMan 9 hours ago

        hey, I got a bridge to sell you, was $20k but we can lower it to $15k if you pay in BTC

        • testplzignore 8 hours ago

          You're paying too much for your bridges man. Who's your bridge guy?

          • dkiebd 8 hours ago

            That wasn’t a bridge.

        • 77pt77 7 hours ago

          Was the bridge built by a genius like Elon though?

  • lifthrasiir 9 hours ago

    FYI, this is the famed nano-banana model which has been now renamed to gemini-2.5-flash-image-preview in LMArena.

    • Mistletoe 9 hours ago

      https://medium.com/data-science-in-your-pocket/what-is-googl...

      For people like me that don’t know what nano-banana is.

      • mock-possum 9 hours ago

        Wow I hate the ‘voice’ in that article - big if true though.

        • daemonologist 8 hours ago

          I suspect the "voice" is a language model with a bad system prompt. (Possibly the author's own words run through an LLM, to be charitable.)

          • 3036e4 7 hours ago

            It's medium.com. YouTube comments quality text packaged as clickbait articles for some revenue share. It was always slop, even without LLMs. Do they even bother with paying human authors now or is the entire site just generated? That would probably be cheaper and improve quality.

            • debugnik 7 hours ago

              > Do they even bother with paying human authors now

              I thought Medium was a stuck up blogging platform. Other than for paid subscriptions, why would they pay bloggers? Are they trying to become the next HuffPost or something?

    • seydor 7 hours ago

      I mean they are going to have to rename their AI because gemini.com is going to IPO soon.

      "Banana" would be a nice name for their AI, and they could freely claim it's bananas.

    • postscapes1 9 hours ago

      This is what i came here to find out. Thanks.

  • mkl 9 hours ago

    That lamp example is pretty impressive (though it's hard to know how cherry-picked it is). The lamp is plugged in, it's lighting the things in the scene, it's casting shadows.

  • abdusco 9 hours ago

    I love that it's substantially faster than ChatGPT's image generation. It takes ages, so slow that the app tells you to not wait and sends you notification when the generation finishes.

    • andrewinardeer 8 hours ago

      "Generate an image of OpenAI investors after using Gemini 2.5 Flash Image"

  • jjangkke an hour ago

    im sure that lot of users are doing this right now and i wonder what the implication of this is, anybody with a photo of you (even just a face) can now generate photos of you in anyway they desire.

    its only a matter of time before this can be used to generate coherence with nudity on consumer hardware.

  • mortsnort 6 hours ago

    At $0.02 per image, it's prohibitively expensive for many use-cases. For comparison, the cheapest Flux model (Schnell) is $0.003 per image.

    • zeknife 5 hours ago

      How many images do you need? What are the use-cases that need a bunch of artificial yet photoreal images produced or altered without human supervision?

      • skybrian 4 hours ago

        I think people still expect a lot of trial and error before getting a usable image. At 2 cents per pull of the slot machine lever, it would still take a while, though.

    • bn-l 5 hours ago

      Schnell isn’t AR and doesn’t do editing.

      • mortsnort 4 hours ago

        Fair but the Gemini "flash" branding implies it's their model for speed/scale in my mind.

    • sergiotapia 3 hours ago

      yes, too expensive for my use case.

          Service            Cost per Image   Cost per 1,000 Images
          Flux Schnell       $0.003           $3.00
          Gemini 1.5 Flash   $0.039           $39.00
  • esamust 5 hours ago

    Strange. I was excited to play around with the 2.5 flash image after testing the nano banana in LMarena, but the results are not at all the same? So I went back to LMarena to replicate my earlier tests but it's way worse than when it was nano banana? Did I miss something?

  • kemyd 8 hours ago

    I don't get the hype. Tested it with the same prompts I used with Midjourney, and the results are worse than in Midjourney a year ago. What am I missing?

    • bonoboTP 8 hours ago

      The hype is about image editing, not pure text-to-image. Upload an input image, say what you want changed, get the output. That's the idea. Much better preservation of characters and objects.

      • appenz 8 hours ago

        I tested it against Flux Pro Kontext (also image editing) and while it's a very different style and approach I overall like Flux better. More focus on image consistency, adjusts the lighting correctly, fixes contradictions in the image.

        • qingcharles 7 hours ago

          I've been testing it against Flux Pro Kontext for several weeks. I would say it beats Flux in a majority of tests, but Flux still surprises from time-to-time. Banana definitely isn't the best 100% of the time -- it falls a bit short of that. Evolution, not revolution.

          • vunderba 6 hours ago

            Agreed. I find myself alternating between Qwen Image Edit 20B, Kontext, and now Flash 2.5 depending on the situation and style. And of course, Flash isn't open-weights, so if you need more control / less censorship then you're SOL.

            • frank_nitti 5 hours ago

              Has there been a sufficient indication to conclude these weights will not (now or ever) be released?

              • vunderba 4 hours ago

                Are any of Google's generative models besides Alphafold open weight? (Veo, Imagen, etc.)

                I don't think we can really answer the question if Flash will ever be released.

      • SirMaster 7 hours ago

        Can it edit the photo at the original resolution?

        Most of my photos these days are 48MP and I don't want to lose a ton of resolution just to edit them.

        • vunderba 4 hours ago

          Great question. I really doubt it would be able to support any resolution. I'm sure that behind the scenes it scales it down to somewhere around 1 mp before processing even if they decide to upscale and return it back at the original resolution.

          • SirMaster 4 hours ago

            So then this doesn't really replace traditional photoshop editing of my photos I guess.

        • qingcharles 7 hours ago

          I don't know. All the testing I've done has output the standard 1024x1024 that all these models are set to output. You might be able to alter the output params on the API or AI Studio.

        • Workaccount2 2 hours ago

          No, it resizes them.

      • kemyd 8 hours ago

        Thanks for clarifying this. That makes a lot more sense.

    • vunderba 7 hours ago

      Midjourney hasn't been SOTA for over a year. Even the latest release of version 7 scores extremely low on prompt adherence only managing to get 2 out of 12 prompts correct. Even Flux Dev running locally consistently out performs it.

      Here's a comparison of Flux Dev, MJ, Imagen, and Flash 2.5.

      https://genai-showdown.specr.net/?models=FLUX_1D%2CMIDJOURNE...

      That being said, if image fidelity is absolutely paramount and/or your prompts are relatively simple - Midjourney can still be fun to experiment with particularly if you crank up the weirdness / chaos parameters.

    • cdrini 8 hours ago

      Hmm, I think the hype is mainly for image editing, not generating. Although note I haven't used it! How are you testing it?

      • kemyd 8 hours ago

        I tested it with two prompts:

        // In this one, Gemini doesn't understand what "cinematic" is

        "A cinematic underwater shot of a turtle gracefully swimming in crystal-clear water [...]"

        // In this one, the reflection in the water in the background has different buildings

        "A modern city where raindrops fall upward into the clouds instead of down, pedestrians calmly walking [...]"

        Midjourney created both perfectly.

        • echelon 8 hours ago

          As others have said, this is an image editing model.

          Editing models do not excel at aesthetic, but they can take your Midjourney image, adjust the composition, and make it perfect.

          These types of models are the Adobe killer.

          • kemyd 7 hours ago

            Noted that! The editing capabilities are impressive. I was excited for image gen because of the API (Midjourney doesn't have it yet).

            • echelon 6 hours ago

              David Holz mentioned on Twitter that he was considering a Midjourney API. They're obviously providing it to Meta now, so it might become more broadly available after Midjourney becomes the default image gen for Meta products.

              Midjourney wins on aesthetic for sure. Nothing else comes close. Midjourney images are just beautiful to behold.

              David's ambition is to beat Google to building a world model you can play games in. He views the image and video business as a temporary intermediate to that end game.

      • qingcharles 7 hours ago

        It actually has impressive image generating ability, IMO. I think the two things go hand-in-hand. Its prompt adherence can be weaker than other models, though.

  • qoez 9 hours ago

    Anyone know how it handles '1920s nazi officer'? They stopped doing humans for a while but now I see they're back so I wonder how they're handling the criticism they got from that

    • napo 9 hours ago

      it said: "I can create images about lots of things but not that. Can I try a different one for you?"

      • napo 9 hours ago

        when giving more context it replied:

        """ Unfortunately, I can't generate images of people. My purpose is to be helpful and harmless, and creating realistic images of humans can be misused in ways that are harmful. This is a safety policy that helps prevent the generation of deepfakes, non-consensual imagery, and other problematic content.

        If you'd like to try a different image prompt, I can help you create images of a wide range of other subjects, such as animals, landscapes, objects, or abstract concepts. """

        • bastawhiz 9 hours ago

          What a weird rejection. You have to scroll pretty far in the article to see an example output that doesn't have a realistic depiction of a person.

          • geysersam 8 hours ago

            It's unfortunate they can't just explain the real reason they don't want to generate the image:

            "Unfortunately I'm not able to generate images that might cause bad PR for Alphabet(tm) or subsidiaries. Is there anything else I can generate for you?"

          • tanaros 9 hours ago

            The rejection message doesn’t seem to be accurate. I tried “happy person” as a prompt in AI Studio and it generated a happy human without any complaints.

            It’s possible that they relaxed the safety filtering to allow humans but forgot to update the error message.

    • Der_Einzige 9 hours ago

      The moment the weights are on huggingface someone with orthogonalize/abliterate the model and make it uncensored.

      • rvnx 9 hours ago

        BigBanana would be a good name for that future OnlyFans model

    • martythemaniak 9 hours ago

      What is a "1920s nazi officer" what do they look like?

  • radarsat1 9 hours ago

    I've had a task in mind for a while now that I've wanted to do with this latest crop of very capable instruction-following image editors.

    Without going into detail, basically the task boils down to, "generate exactly image 1, but replace object A with the object depicted in image 2."

    Where image 2 is some front-facing generic version, ideally I want the model to place this object perfectly in the scene, replacing the existing object, that I have identified ideally exactly by being able to specify its position, but otherwise by just being able to describe very well what to do.

    For models that can't accept multiple images, I've tried a variation where I put a blue box around the object that I want to replace, and paste the object that I want it to put there at the bottom of the image on its own.

    I've tried some older models, and ChatGPT, also qwen-image last week, and just now, this one. They all fail at it. To be fair, this model got pretty damn close, it replaced the wrong object in the scene, but it was close to the right position, and the object was perfectly oriented and lit. But it was wrong. (Using the bounding box method.. it should have been able to identify exactly what I wanted to do. Instead it removed the bounding box and replaced a different object in a different but close-by position.)

    Are there any models that have been specifically trained to be able to infill or replace specific locations in an image with reference to an example image? Or is this just like a really esoteric task?

    So far all the in-filling models I've found are only based on text inputs.

    • rushingcreek 9 hours ago

      Yes! There is a model called ACE++ from Alibaba that is specifically trained to replace masked areas with a reference image. We use it in https://phind.design. It does seem like a very esoteric and uncommon task though.

      • radarsat1 3 hours ago

        Oh cool thanks I haven't come across that one, I'll give it a shot.

      • ceroxylon 8 hours ago

        I don't think it is that esoteric, that sounds like deepfake 101. If you don't mind answering, does Phind do anything to prevent / mitigate this?

    • Valk3_ 4 hours ago

      Not sure what your exact task is, but I have a similar goal as well. Haven't had time to try alot of different models or ideas yet because got busy with other stuff, but have you tried this: https://youtu.be/dQ-4LASopoM?si=e33FQd5f4fYr4J5L&t=299

      where you stitch two images together, one is the working image (the one you want to modify), and the other one is the reference image, you then instruct the model what to do. I'm guessing this approach is as brittle as the other attempts you've tried so far, but I thought this seemed like an interesting approach.

  • j_m_b 9 hours ago

    If this can do character consistency, that's huge. Just make it do the same for video...

    • ACCount37 8 hours ago

      It's probably built on reused "secret sauce" from the video generation models.

  • johnfn 7 hours ago

    I naively went onto Gemini in order to try to use the new model and had what I could only describe as the worst conversation I've had with an AI since GPT 3.5[1]. Is this really the model that's on top of the leaderboard right now? This feels about 500 ELO points worse than my typical conversation with GPT 5.

    Edit: OK, OK, I actually got it to work, and yes, I admit the results are incredible[2]. I honestly have no idea what happened with Pro 2.5 the first time.

    [1]: https://g.co/gemini/share/5767894ee3bc [2]: https://g.co/gemini/share/a48c00eb6089

    • GaggiX 7 hours ago

      "Google AI Studio" and select the model

    • byteknight 7 hours ago

      Are you doing roleplay?

    • SpaceManNabs 7 hours ago

      sometimes these bots just go awry. i wish you could checkpoint spots in a conversation so you could replay from a that point, maybe with a push in the latent space or a new seed.

  • dpoloncsak 9 hours ago

    I've been looking for a whitepaper or something. So far I've found this...which is not a whitepaper but seems relevant

    https://developers.googleblog.com/en/introducing-gemini-2-5-...

    It seems like this is 'nano-banana' all along

    • lemonish97 9 hours ago

      Yes, they mention that the model is aka nano-banana in the blogpost

  • beyonddream 9 hours ago

    “Internal server error

    Sorry, there seems to be an error. Please try again soon.”

    Never thought I would ever see this on a google owned websites!

    • lionkor 9 hours ago

      A cheap quip would be "it's vibe-coded", but that might actually very well be the case at this point!

    • reaperducer 7 hours ago

      Never thought I would ever see this on a google owned websites!

      Really? Google used to be famous not only for its errors, but for its creative error pages. I used to have a google.com bookmark that would send an animated 418.

  • anotheryou 8 hours ago

    Super cheap generation but expensive image upload, do I read that right?

    https://openrouter.ai/google/gemini-2.5-flash-image-preview

    • daviding 7 hours ago

      Not sure. If the Flash image output is $30/M [1] then that's pretty similar to gpt-image-1 costs. So a faster and better model perhaps but not really cheaper?

      [1] https://developers.googleblog.com/en/introducing-gemini-2-5-...

      • daviding 3 hours ago

        Since I can't edit, it seems like Flash image is about 23% (4 cents vs 17 cents) of the cost of Openai gpt-image-1, if you're putting an image and prompt in and getting out, say, a 1024x1024 generated image. With the quicker production time that makes it interesting. Expecting Openai to respond at least in terms of pricing, e.g. a flat rate output cap price or something to be comparable.

    • dangoodmanUT 7 hours ago

      That’s like .12 cents per image uploaded

  • FergusArgyll an hour ago

    Google really needed something viral, this may be it...

  • oulipo2 4 hours ago

    I tried it, it gave a poor quality image that wasn't even what I asked for. I then asked for a correction, and it gave me another faulty image. Doesn't seem to be there

  • mNovak 4 hours ago

    These models still seem to struggle with getting repeated patterns right. Others have mentioned piano keys; I've noticed they also almost always fail to generate a valid Go board.

  • jngiam1 4 hours ago

    Is this related to https://nanobanana.ai/ at all? It’s what comes up when I search for it

    • polynomial 4 hours ago

      Asking the important questions.

  • shashankpritam 7 hours ago

    Are men not attractive? Or perhaps for Google, this blog is a targeted content? But who is it targeting? I would like to see the reasoning behind using all women images (at the least the top/first ones) to show off the model capabilities. I have noticed this trend in the image manipulation business a lot.

    • spiderice 4 hours ago

      Did they update the blog post? For me, of the 4 examples in the post, 2 are men and 2 are women.

    • rd 7 hours ago

      The average man finds the average woman more attractive than the average woman finds the average man. Replace attractive with (eye-catching/attention-grabbing/motivating/retention-boosting).

      • shashankpritam 7 hours ago

        Oh, in that case, it makes sense. Also, I think men/women consume different kind of media and this is one of those "men dominated" corner of the internet. I also think due to trainig data bias - there could be some difference in quality with different subjects. So, they might be showing off their best of best.

    • zoeysmithe 6 hours ago

      Because tech is largely male dominated and has inherent sexism/patriarchy and images of women, especially conventionally attractive ones, has the perception of aiding sales.

      Also women are seen as more cooperative and submissive, hence so many home assistants and AI being women's voices/femme coded.

      • shashankpritam 3 hours ago

        Thank you for saying that. When I posted that GP comment - it got immediately downvoted and I couldn't even see my comment on the thread. I kind of expected to get it tagged 'meta/off-topic' and removed.

        The way I see it - corporations would like to exploit prejudices for revenue. Of course, this is not something new. But it is a societal issue and the corporate world is playing a large role in it.

        For context this was the original link - https://deepmind.google/models/gemini/image/

  • therealmarv 9 hours ago

    What is the max input and output resolution of images?

    This is why I'm sticking mostly to Adobe Photoshop's AI editing because there are no restrictions in that regard.

    • qingcharles 7 hours ago

      In my testing it has been stuck at 1024x1024. Have to upscale with something...

    • abdusco 9 hours ago

      Around 1 megapixel, AFAICT.

  • modeless 8 hours ago

    This model is very impressive. Yesterday (as nano-banana) I gave it a photo of an indoor scene with a picture hanging on a wall, and asked it the picture on a wall with a copy of the whole photo. It worked perfectly the first time.

    It didn't succeed in doing the same recursively, but it's still clearly a huge advance in image models.

  • elorant 9 hours ago

    I have a certain use case for such image generators. Feed them an entire news article I fetch from bbc and ask it to create an image to accompany the article. Thus far only midjourney managed to understand context. And now this, which is even more impressive. We live in interesting times.

    • vunderba 5 hours ago

      I think most of the SOTA models could probably handle this but you'd probably get better results using a pipeline:

      1. Reduce article to a synopsis using an LLM

      2. Generate 4-5 varying description prompts from the synopsis

      3. Feed the prompts to an imagegen model

      Though I'd wager that gpt-image-1 (in the ChatGPT) being multimodal could probably managed it as well.

    • oracleclyde 8 hours ago

      I just tried it inside Gemini with a Medium article. Here's my prompt: "Read the article at this url and provide a hero image that incapsulates the message the author wants to convey: https://bioneers.org/supreme-oligarchy-billionaires-supreme-..."

      The response was a summary of the article that was pretty good, along with an image that dagnabbit, read the assignment.

  • asadm 6 hours ago

    this is amazing. I just wish models would have more non-textual controls. I don't want to TYPE my instructions. We need a better UI for editing images with AI.

    • mh- 5 hours ago

      Can you expand on that? What would ideal look like to you?

  • jawns 8 hours ago

    I was able to upload my kids' back-to-school photos and ask nano-banana to turn them into a goth, an '80s workout girl, and a tracksuit mafioso. The results were incredibly believable, and I was able to prank my mom with them!

  • stuckinhell 9 hours ago

    Is this the "nano banana" thing the art ai world was going crazy about recently ?

  • simianwords 8 hours ago

    L like it but it is very restricted. I can't modify people's faces etc.

  • simedw 9 hours ago

    The model is only available in AI Studio when I set my VPN to the USA (I’m located in the UK).

    • ctippett 5 hours ago

      Also in the UK and I could access the model just fine from AI studio, no VPN required.

  • darrinm 4 hours ago

    Has anyone tested how generation speed compares to gpt-image-1?

    • cornedor 3 hours ago

      It's consistently around 10 seconds, often faster.

  • mindprince 9 hours ago

    What is the difference between Gemini Flash Image models and the Imagen models?

    • og_kalu 9 hours ago

      Imagen is a diffusion text to image model. You write some text that describes your image, you get an image out and that's it.

      Flash Image is an image (and text) predicting large language model. In a similar fashion to how trained LLMs can manipulate/morph text, this can do that for images as well. Things like style transfer, character consistency etc.

      You can communicate with it in a way you can't for imagen, and it has a better overall world understanding.

    • raincole 8 hours ago

      Imagen: Stable Diffusion, but by Google

      Gemini Flash Image: ChatGPT image, but by Google

  • kumarm 9 hours ago

    Seems to be failing at API Calls right now with "You exceeded your current quota, please check your plan and billing details. For more information on this error,"

    Hope they get API issues resolved soon.

  • patates 9 hours ago

    It seems that they still block access from Europe, or from Germany at least.

    • beklein 9 hours ago

      It works fine in OpenRouter

    • elorant 9 hours ago

      I can access it from Greece through AI Studio just fine.

    • punkpeye 9 hours ago

      Use one of the router services

    • Narciss 9 hours ago

      Use it on fal.ai

      • kumarm 9 hours ago

        Since API currently is not working (seems rate limits not set for Image Generation yet) I tried on fal.

        Definitely inferior to results I see on AI Studio and image generation time is 6s on AI Studio vs 30 seconds on Fal.AI

        • echelon 8 hours ago

          > Definitely inferior to results

          Quality or latency?

    • kridsdale1 9 hours ago

      Get less contradictory regulations, then.

  • bsenftner 8 hours ago

    All these image models are time vampires and need to be looked at with very suspicious eyes. Try to make a room - that's easy, now try to make multiple views of the same room - next to impossible. If one is intending to use these image models for anything that requires consistency of imagery, forget it.

  • mclau157 8 hours ago

    I could see this destroying a lot of jobs like photography, editing, marketing, etc.

    • bityard 7 hours ago

      These jobs won't go away. Power tools didn't destroy carpentry. Computers didn't destroy math. But workers who don't embrace these new tools will probably get left behind by those who do.

  • sandreas 8 hours ago

    I wonder if this could be used for preprocessing documents before doing OCR...

  • artursapek 2 hours ago

    There are so many uses for this it boggles my mind. Ecommerce, real estate, advertising...

  • captainregex 5 hours ago

    anyone else get excited about nano and then sad when you realized it’s not actually a small model

  • cchance 7 hours ago

    did they actually roll it out i cant seem to find the option to use it

    Edit: Nevermind its not in gemini for everyone yet, its in aistudio though

  • keepamovin 9 hours ago

    Those examples are gorgeous and amazing. This is really cool.

  • Narciss 9 hours ago

    Nano banana is here!

  • TrousersHoisted 7 hours ago

    What is the "flash image?" I don't see anything downloadable there...

  • bawana 5 hours ago

    Google is eating adobe

  • chadcmulligan 8 hours ago

    This is technically impressive though I really wish they'd choose other professions to automate than graphic design.

    • dangoodmanUT 7 hours ago

      It’s what data is available, they’re not targeting graphic design

    • reaperducer 7 hours ago

      AI is supposed to set us all free. Yet, so far all the tech companies have done is eliminate the jobs of the lowest-paid people (artists, writers, photographers, designers) and transfer that money to billionaires. Yay.

      • anthonypasq 7 hours ago

        [Plows] are supposed to set us all free. Yet, so far all the tech companies have done is eliminate the jobs of the lowest-paid people ([field hands]) and transfer that money to landowners. Yay.

        • reaperducer 7 hours ago

          If you can't understand the difference, perhaps consult one of your AI chat overlords.

          • throitallaway 6 hours ago

            History repeats itself. Productivity gains the last ~half century have mostly made their way to the top.

  • uejfiweun 8 hours ago

    This is pretty remarkable, I'm having a lot of fun playing around with this. Kudos to Google.

  • sam1234apter 7 hours ago

    this model is awesome - now anyone can build photo ai apps

  • t_mahmood 7 hours ago

    After the rugpull of Android, are we really going to trust Google with anything?

  • BoorishBears 4 hours ago

    I'm really waiting for a Pro sized Gemini model with image output.

    I experimented heavily with 2.0 for a site I work on, but it never left preview and it had some gaps that were clearly due to being a small model (like lacking world knowledge, struggling with repetition, missing nuance in instructions, etc.)

    2.5 Flash/nano-banana is a major step up but still has small model gaps peeking through. It still gets to "locked in" states where it's just repeating itself, which is a similar failure mode of small models for creative writing tasks.

    A 2.5 Pro would likely close those gaps and definitively beat gpt-image-1

  • lyu07282 9 hours ago

    still fails at analog clocks, if anyone else was also wondering

  • ragazzina 6 hours ago

    "Can you make a version of this picture where I wear the best possible sunglasses for my face shape?"

    made me realize that AI image modification is now technically flawless, utterly devoid of taste, and that I myself am a rather unattractive fellow.

  • asdev 9 hours ago

    Looks like AI image generation is converging to a local maximum as well

  • yuchana 7 hours ago

    The progress is insanely good but imagine the competition between engineers especially there are many people taking up courses in ai and cs

  • GaggiX 9 hours ago

    An image seems to be 256 tokens looking the AIstudio tab, so you can generate 3906,25 images per 1M tokens, that seems a lot if I'm not wrong in some ways.

    Edit: the blog post is now loading and reports "1290 output tokens per image" even though on the AI studio it said something different.

  • dboreham 7 hours ago

    Hmm...assumed this was a model shipped on a flash drive...

  • runarberg 7 hours ago

    Still fails the “full glass of wine” test, and still shows many of the artifacts typical of AI generated images like non-nonsensical text, misplacement of objects, etc.

    To be honest I am kind of glad. As AI generated images proliferate, I am hoping it will be easier for humans to call them out as AI.

  • idiotsecant 7 hours ago

    This is going to be so helpful for all the poorly photoshopped Chinese junk eBay listings.

  • awestroke 9 hours ago

    Internal server error. lol

  • casey2 6 hours ago

    4 out of 7 images show a woman 1 out of 7 show a man I feel like this is trying to advertise power over women to men. Which makes it evil.