News

Google announces Nano Banana Pro

Features better text, advanced editing, and built-in watermarking.

Google has launched Nano Banana Pro, a new image generation and editing tool built on Gemini 3 Pro. It follows Nano Banana, which was designed for quick and casual edits. The new model is aimed at more complex projects and professional use.

Nano Banana Pro uses advanced reasoning and real-world knowledge to create richer visuals. It can turn data into infographics, diagrams, and explainers, pulling live information from Google Search.

The model also improves how text looks inside images. Words are clearer, more accurate, and can be rendered in multiple languages, fonts, and styles.

The tool supports larger and more detailed edits. Users can combine up to 14 images in one composition and keep consistency across multiple characters. It also offers more controls, including adjusting camera angles, lighting, and color grading. Output can be customized for different platforms, with options for aspect ratios and resolutions up to 4K.

Google is rolling out Nano Banana Pro across several services. Users can access it in the Gemini app, with free users limited to quotas and Pro or Ultra subscribers given more. Professionals will see it in Google Ads and Workspace apps like Slides and Vids. Developers and enterprises can use it through the Gemini API, Google AI Studio, and Vertex AI. Creatives will also find it in Flow, Google’s AI filmmaking tool.

Also Read: Philippines leads global use of Google’s Nano Banana image tool

To ensure transparency, all images carry Google’s SynthID watermark. Free and Pro tiers include a visible Gemini sparkle watermark, while Ultra subscribers and developer tools use only the invisible marker.

Bryan Rilloraza has been a fixture in the local tech scene for over a decade, sharing his perspective as a tech enthusiast and industry veteran. Backed by an MBA from De La Salle University, a Bachelor’s Degree from the University of the Philippines, and 20 years of corporate experience in the telecommunications and banking sectors, Bryan provides a practical, real-world analysis of how technology serves the consumer.

Write A Comment