Gemini 3 is Google's smartest AI yet, and it's now in the hands of anyone with the Gemini app. That means over 650 million people each month can use it to work with text, images, video, audio, and even code. In other words, it's like having a digital Swiss Army knife for information.
So, what's actually new? Gemini 3 doesn't just think faster—it reasons better, and it can do things the old version couldn't even dream of.
Imagine you upload a dense academic paper, a marathon-length lecture, or a tricky tutorial. Gemini can turn all of that into interactive flashcards, visual guides, or whatever study tool you need. Or maybe you film yourself playing tennis or giving a talk—Gemini can break down your performance, spot what needs work, and even suggest a training plan to help you get better.
Search is no longer just about scrolling through walls of text. With Gemini 3, AI Mode can build visual layouts, interactive tools, and even live simulations, all tailored to your question. Instead of reading about how something works, you can actually play with it.
Want to blend images, design a poster, or sketch out a diagram? Nano Banana Pro lets you do all that, and you can resize your creations for wherever you want to share them. If you need video, Veo 3.1 lets you use several reference images to control every detail—characters, objects, style, and scene—so your vision actually matches what you see on screen.
Why does any of this matter? If you're a content creator, you can upload your latest cooking video or workout demo and ask, 'What could I do better?' Gemini will give you real, specific feedback on your technique and presentation. If you're a student, you can turn a recorded lecture into your own set of study tools—no more frantic note-taking. And with those new visual tools in Search, you can finally get hands-on with a concept instead of just reading about it.
Try it for yourself: film your next attempt at a skill, a talk, or even just showing how you do something, and let Gemini point out what you could improve. Sometimes, a second pair of eyes—especially an AI's—can spot what you miss.