On February 25, 2026, Google officially announced a major version update and ecosystem integration for its AI creative studio Flow. The core of this update involves deeply integrating the original image generation experimental projects Whisk and ImageFX into the Flow platform, marking Google's strategic shift from scattered experiments to a unified workflow in its multimodal AI tools.

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The new version of Flow features Google's latest image model Nano Banana. Users can not only generate high-precision images with this model but also use it as underlying material directly imported into Veo video models, enabling seamless transitions from static to dynamic content.

In addition, the platform introduced a text-driven local editing lasso tool, enhanced camera motion control, and a "Collection" feature for media management.

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Since its launch last year, Flow has generated over 1.5 billion pieces of media content. It is currently operating under a "free + subscription" model. Google plans to start migrating existing projects from March, helping old users transition smoothly.

Industry experts generally believe that this move not only strengthens Google's industrial production capacity in the field of creative generation but also enhances its ecological moat in competition with rivals like OpenAI by breaking down barriers between text, images, and videos.