Google and Figma partner in bid to remake real-time design with Gemini 2.5

Google and Figma partner in bid to remake real-time design with Gemini 2.5
October 9, 2025 No Comments

Creativity has always been governed by time—not just how long it takes to bring an idea to life, but how long a creator can stay “in flow.” Every designer knows the frustration of an idea hanging in digital limbo. But those pauses, once accepted as inevitable, are now starting to vanish. 

Figma, the cloud-based interface design tool, and Google Cloud, the computing and storage platform, have announced the integration of Google’s Gemini 2.5 Flash directly into Figma’s design platform. The collaboration aims to let designers generate visuals and make edits almost instantly, eliminating the lag between an idea and its execution.

For users, that means faster collaboration, smoother iteration, and a more natural creative flow.
“The economic significance of latency in AI is far greater than just speed—it’s about changing the commercial viability and product experience for every application built on a generative model,” says Matt Renner, president of global revenue at Google Cloud. Lower latency, in turn, decreases computational and financial expenses, allowing the AI tools to become more scalable and efficient for high-volume tasks, he added.
Gemini 2.5 Flash (also known as “Nano Banana”) rose to prominence for its ability to merge multiple images, keep characters consistent across edits, and generate a wide range of styles, from lifelike portraits to classic art, in mere seconds.

Google claims that in early integrations of Gemini 2.5 Flash, Figma users saw a 50% reduction in latency for the platform’s “Make Image” feature, unlocking faster image generation capabilities for its users.
“In Figma, every second AI can return to the user, whether it’s time saved renaming layers, editing images or even generating multiple images at the same time, frees them up to focus on the kind of higher-level problem solving and deep iteration that’s at the root of all great design,” says Abhishek Mathur, vice president of platform engineering at Figma.
The partnership signals a deeper strategic shift for Google Cloud. Rather than competing for user attention, the company aims to embed its AI models, including Gemini 2.5 Flash, Gemini 2.0, and Imagen 4, directly into third-party creative ecosystems like Figma to make Gemini an unseen accelerant that enhances existing tools instead of forcing users to switch platforms.
“Our focus is on helping users go from idea to production, and we see AI as core to how this workflow will evolve moving forward,” Mathur adds.

Google’s ecosystem strategy to scale Gemini

Over the past year, Google has woven Gemini into a broad range of partner products, from workspace tools to data analytics suites, positioning the speed and security of its AI models and ease of integration as its defining edge.  Salesforce has integrated Gemini into its Agentforce platform to power AI agents across Google Cloud and Salesforce environments. Oracle now supports Gemini models on Oracle Cloud Infrastructure, enabling enterprises to build multimodal AI agents that can process text, images, motion, and audio data. 
Google’s underlying bet is simple: If AI feels secure and frictionless, widespread adoption will feel inevitable.
Released in June, Gemini 2.5 Flash is known for generating high-quality visuals quickly and affordably (one-third the price of Gemini Pro). The model can deliver its first reply in under half a second, making it ideal for fast-moving creative apps, chatbots, or customer support systems. Moreover, the latest Gemini 2.5 Flash updates have improved its accuracy in following instructions, made responses more concise, and boosted speed by up to 40%, making it one of the fastest, most efficient AI models available.
Experts caution, however, that faster performance alone may not be enough for Figma to win over creative professionals.
“Drops in latency will certainly encourage tool usage and support the kind of cross-discipline collaboration Figma has been building toward for years,” says AJ Joplin, senior analyst at Forrester, who focuses on experience design, design organizations, and design leadership. “But taste still matters. The efficiencies gained from generative tools can quickly disappear if teams don’t pair that time saved with the ability to critically assess what the AI produces.”

The AI design race is heating up

The Google-Figma partnership comes amid an escalating AI-design race.
Adobe has integrated AI models from Google Cloud, OpenAI, and others like fal.ai, Ideogram, Luma, Pika, and Runway to power its Firefly platform and Sensei AI features, including generative fill, AI video editing, 3D design, and smart stock tools. And Canva has become an AI-first platform.
Announced at OpenAI’s Developer Day on Oct. 6, Canva is now a pilot partner for ChatGPT app integration, allowing users to create and edit designs directly within ChatGPT. The move aims to bring visual design tools to the chatbot’s 800 million weekly users.
If Gemini 2.5 Flash delivers on its promise, the future of design won’t just be more intelligent; it will feel instantaneous. And in the new economy of creativity, that sense of speed may prove to be the ultimate edge.

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