Google Gemini’s Nano Banana trend has triggered a frenzy, prompting millions of users to reimagine and recreate their images in various AI settings. Sundar Pichai recently shared his reaction on X after learning that Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang is a big fan of the Nano Banana AI trend.
At a recent event in London, Huang, known for his signature leather jacket, enthusiastically praised the tool. “How could anyone not love Nano Banana? I mean Nano Banana, how good is that? Tell me it’s not true!” he exclaimed, the Wired reported. “Tell me it’s not true! It’s so good. I was just talking to Demis (Hassabis, CEO of DeepMind) yesterday and I said ‘How about that Nano Banana! How good is that?’”
Nicole Brichtova, a team member at Google DeepMind, posted about Huang’s excitement on X, writing, “Jensen Huang being a nano banana fan made my day.” Pichai responded by quoting her post and adding, “Mine too.”
See the viral post here:
Mine too:) https://t.co/0ujxOax80Z
— Sundar Pichai (@sundarpichai) September 17, 2025
The post quickly gained traction, drawing a flurry of reactions. “The most impressive aspect of nano banana is its exceptional cost efficiency compared to other image models. And thank your engineers for that because it’s been an absolute hit and the servers are still running smoothly,” a user wrote. “Nano bananas are the new black, I guess. Don’t @ me when they start growing their own Silicon Valley,” another user said.
“Thank you for nano banana. It is revolutionary,” a third user reacted.
Earlier, Google’s Gemini shared the prompt to create 3D figurines. “Create a 1/7 scale commercialized figurine of the characters in the picture, in a realistic style, in a real environment. The figurine is placed on a computer desk. The figurine has a round transparent acrylic base, with no text on the base. The content on the computer screen is a 3D modeling process of this figurine. Next to the computer screen is a toy packaging box, designed in a style reminiscent of high-quality collectible figures, printed with original artwork. The packaging features two-dimensional flat illustrations,” the post read.