• Home
  • Blog
  • Android
  • Cars
  • Gadgets
  • Gaming
  • Internet
  • Mobile
  • Sci-Fi
Tech News, Magazine & Review WordPress Theme 2017
  • Home
  • Blog
  • Android
  • Cars
  • Gadgets
  • Gaming
  • Internet
  • Mobile
  • Sci-Fi
No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • Blog
  • Android
  • Cars
  • Gadgets
  • Gaming
  • Internet
  • Mobile
  • Sci-Fi
No Result
View All Result
Blog - Creative Collaboration
No Result
View All Result
Home Android

OpenAI’s GPT-5 model is the first to give Gemini 2.5 Pro a run for its money

August 12, 2025
Share on FacebookShare on Twitter

AI Byte

(Image credit: Future)

AI Byte is a weekly column covering all things artificial intelligence, including AI models, apps, features, and how they all impact your favorite devices.

OpenAI has the clear brand advantage in the AI race, and that’s something that may prove impossible for competitors to overcome. ChatGPT has more weekly users than Meta or Google has on a monthly basis. Being first comes with benefits, which OpenAI is certainly reaping.

In the time since, though, the competition caught up — at least on a functional level. AI models from Google, DeepSeek, Claude, and xAI have all held top-five spots on LMArena’s leaderboard, signaling that the race from basic large language models (LLMs) to artificial general intelligence (AGI) is far from decided. For months, I’ve been certain that Gemini 2.5 Pro is a better and more versatile thinking model than anything coming out of OpenAI.

Well, OpenAI is hoping to change that narrative with the release of GPT-5, which launched for everyone last week (Aug. 7). It’s actually a collection of models that can intelligently pick which one is best for a given prompt on the fly. And at least for now, it’s at the top of both the LMArena and WebDev Arena leaderboards — two crucial LLM benchmarks.


You may like

GPT-5 doesn’t solve all of ChatGPT’s hallucination problems, and it’s definitely not AGI. There are some areas where Google models still outperform comparable ones from OpenAI. Regardless, GPT-5 looks impressive and free, and that might be all OpenAI needs to maintain its hefty lead over the competition.

Where OpenAI’s GPT-5 beats Google’s Gemini 2.5 Pro

The ChatGPT interface thinking with GPT-5.

(Image credit: Future)

GPT-5’s smartest feature has nothing to do with compute or its knowledge base. It’s called real-time routing, and it helps pick the right model for your task without any additional user input. Currently, AI chatbots like ChatGPT and Gemini are littered with a variety of new, old, and experimental models best suited for a specific prompt. That’s great, but the onus was on the user to decide which one is best. With names like GPT-o3 and GPT-4o, or Gemini Flash Thinking Experimental, making that decision wasn’t always easy.

Instead, GPT-5 is a simple name for a collection of OpenAI models. It includes a lightweight model for quick, easy prompts and a more thoughtful model called GPT-5 Thinking for complex queries. OpenAI’s real-time router means that all of these models function as one, at least to the user. After inputting a prompt to ChatGPT, the GPT-5 router will decide which one to use, streamlining the UX.

There are still ways to manually control which GPT-5 model responds to your prompt. You can use phrases like “think really hard about this” in your prompt to trigger GPT-5 Thinking. If ChatGPT mistakenly opts for the thinking model, users can tap Get a quick answer to pivot to the lightweight model instead. Both models appear to be very reliable in early testing, clearly citing sources to avoid hallucinations.

Get the latest news from Android Central, your trusted companion in the world of Android

These online sources, which include sites like Android Central, are a key reason why hallucinations are down with GPT-5. OpenAI says that with web search enabled on GPT-5 prompts, the model is about 45% less likely to contain a factual error than GPT-4o. Hallucinations are by no means extinct, but they are less prevalent when using GPT-5 in ChatGPT.

Independent tests and benchmarks seem to align with OpenAI’s claims that GPT-5 is better at writing, coding, and health-based tasks. It finally usurps Gemini 2.5 Pro on both the LMArena and WebDev Arena leaderboards, claiming the top spot overall. Specifically, GPT-5 seems to have the edge in text-based and coding prompts. I used a sample prompt from OpenAI to test GPT-5’s coding capabilities in ChatGPT, and came away seriously impressed.

Where Gemini still beats ChatGPT

GPT-5 isn’t better than Gemini 2.5 Pro in every area, and OpenAI still doesn’t seem to be able to match Google’s image and video generation. That’s reflected in LMArena’s text-to-image, text-to-video, and image-to-video benchmarks — Google’s Imagen 4 and Veo 3 tools sweep the graphical suite of generative AI tests.

I wanted to test that outcome in the real world, so I fed ChatGPT and Gemini the same prompt: “Generate an image of Johnny Thunderbird holding up a Big East Tournament trophy at Madison Square Garden.” Here’s how the images turned out:

ChatGPT and Gemini respond to the prompt: "generate an image of Johnny Thunderbird holding up a Big East Tournament trophy at Madison Square Garden."

(Image credit: Future)

Anecdotally, the generated images align with the benchmark results — Google’s video- and image-generation chops are much stronger than OpenAI’s. For starters, Google gave me a generated image in about 10 seconds, and I had to wait nearly two minutes for an image to come back from ChatGPT.

From an accuracy standpoint, Gemini won handedly. It knew I was talking about my alma mater’s basketball program from the mascot reference, and correctly recreated Madison Square Garden with a ton of detail and flair. Meanwhile, ChatGPT produced an image with the wrong team and I’m not convinced the generic background is really MSG; it looks like it could be any basketball court.

So, if you’re the kind of person who likes to switch between LLMs based on your task, perhaps choose GPT-5 for writing or coding and Gemini for image or video generation.

GPT-5 is great, but GPT-4o just won’t go away

ChatGPT Live Conversation transcript about KOTOR II on the Galaxy Z Fold 6

(Image credit: Andrew Myrick / Android Central)

A wrinkle in OpenAI’s GPT-5 rollout is user attachment to older models. GPT-5 was more than two years in the making, as OpenAI reportedly struggled to make an AI model worthy of the title. As it turns out, users didn’t want one. OpenAI is bringing back GPT-4o — a model that was supposed to be sunset in favor of GPT-5 — because of user backlash (via Tom’s Guide).

It might seem silly for those of us who touch grass, but ChatGPT users have seemingly created parasocial relationships with OpenAI models. They’d rather use the AI model they “know” over GPT-5, even if the newer one is better in every way.

I think you can extrapolate this premise to the broader AI race. In some ways, it really doesn’t matter whether Google, OpenAI, Claude, or DeepSeek has the best-performing model. People are going to stick to the models they like and are familiar with, and if that’s the case, OpenAI’s lead in this space may be insurmountable for the competition.

Next Post

NYT Connections hints and answers for August 21: Tips to solve 'Connections' #794.

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

No Result
View All Result

Recent Posts

  • Kingdom Of Heaven 4K Steelbook Edition Restocked At Amazon
  • Today’s NYT mini crossword answers for August 12, 2025
  • T-Mobile asked to take down deceptive ‘Switch and Save’ ads
  • Reddit is blocking Wayback Machine from archiving users’ posts
  • NYT Connections Sports Edition hints and answers for August 12: Tips to solve Connections #323

Recent Comments

    No Result
    View All Result

    Categories

    • Android
    • Cars
    • Gadgets
    • Gaming
    • Internet
    • Mobile
    • Sci-Fi
    • Home
    • Shop
    • Privacy Policy
    • Terms and Conditions

    © CC Startup, Powered by Creative Collaboration. © 2020 Creative Collaboration, LLC. All Rights Reserved.

    No Result
    View All Result
    • Home
    • Blog
    • Android
    • Cars
    • Gadgets
    • Gaming
    • Internet
    • Mobile
    • Sci-Fi

    © CC Startup, Powered by Creative Collaboration. © 2020 Creative Collaboration, LLC. All Rights Reserved.

    Get more stuff like this
    in your inbox

    Subscribe to our mailing list and get interesting stuff and updates to your email inbox.

    Thank you for subscribing.

    Something went wrong.

    We respect your privacy and take protecting it seriously