Pics, powered by Nano Banana 2, lets users generate images from a text prompt and then move, resize, or translate individual elements without re-rolling the whole composition. Rolling out to Workspace Business Standard and higher, and to Google AI Pro and Ultra subscribers in the coming months.
Google unveiled Pics at the I/O 2026 developer conference on Tuesday, a new AI image generator and editor that will sit inside Google Workspace.
The product is positioned as the company’s answer to Canva and Adobe Express on the design tools front, with precision-editing controls explicitly framed against the ‘prompt-and-pray’ workflow of earlier AI image generators.
Pics is powered by Nano Banana 2, Google’s image model that the company says is well-suited to the app because it supports precise text rendering, real-world knowledge and detailed visual output. The generator-and-editor combination lets users move, resize and transform individual objects inside a composition, modify and translate embedded text, and update specific regions of an image without regenerating the whole frame.
That last capability, which the company calls localised object editing, is the part that Pics is being marketed on most aggressively against single-prompt rivals.
Workspace integration is the second pillar of the launch. Pics will be built directly into Google Slides for in-deck image generation and editing, and creations can be saved straight to Google Drive for sharing. The company has not yet confirmed Docs as a launch surface; the product page lists Slides and Drive specifically, with broader Workspace coverage implied but unsubscribed.
On rollout, Pics is launching first into Google’s Workspace Experiments programme for a small group of early-access testers; admins inside organisations using Workspace can opt their tenancy in by enabling Gemini Alpha features.
Pics will become generally available ‘in the coming months’ for Workspace customers on Business Standard and higher plans, and for Google AI Pro and Ultra subscribers. Pricing inside those existing tiers has not been separately disclosed; the company has not signalled a Pics-specific add-on.
Pics extends the Nano Banana family. Google has been shipping the Gemini app over the past year, with Nano Banana 2 the version positioned for precision use cases like text-on-image rendering and brand-style consistency. PetaPixel’s product walkthrough calls out the difference between Pics and OpenAI’s image-generation offering inside ChatGPT as a workflow gap rather than a model gap: ChatGPT generates faster, Pics offers more direct control over what the user wants to change after the first generation lands.
AI design tools have become a strategic battleground for the major model labs, with Pics the most visible commitment any of them has made to the productivity-suite-integrated channel rather than the standalone consumer app.
On provenance, the launch sits alongside Google’s SynthID watermarking layer, which has been the default on Google’s generative-image output since 2023 and which OpenAI adopted earlier this year under the C2PA standard.
Google has not yet published a separate provenance statement for Pics outputs, though the Workspace-integrated framing suggests the same SynthID-by-default architecture used across the wider Gemini family applies here. DeepMind’s broader generative-model release cadence through 2025 and 2026 has consistently shipped watermarking as a launch-day default.
What Google has not yet disclosed: the per-tenancy enablement timeline beyond the ‘coming months’ framing, whether Pics is included at no extra cost inside the Business Standard, Business Plus, Enterprise, AI Pro and AI Ultra tiers or whether usage caps apply, the specific Nano Banana 2 model card and benchmark scores, the underlying compute footprint, and whether the precision-editing layer will eventually extend into Docs and Gmail-native composition surfaces.
The Workspace Discord community and the Experiments newsletter are positioned as the primary public-channel signals for staged availability. The next visible proof point will be the first general-availability tranche to AI Ultra subscribers and Business Standard customers, expected this summer on the timeline third-party briefings have characterised.


