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TL;DR

  • Google says “Nano Banana” began as a late-night placeholder name typed by a PM when submitting the model anonymously.
  • The nickname stuck after the model went viral, prompting Google to adopt it.
  • As the name caught on, Google used banana icons in the Gemini app to signpost the feature.

If you’ve been wondering why Google’s viral image editor ended up with the nickname “Nano Banana,” the mystery’s over. The team says the moniker started life as a throwaway placeholder, and then the internet refused to let it go.

On the latest episode of the Made by Google podcast, product lead David Sharon explains that the model’s official name is Gemini 2.5 Flash Image. However, when a Product Manager named Nina submitted the model anonymously to the LM Arena benchmark website, allowing users to test it out, she had to enter a temporary label that kept it anonymous. At 2:30 in the morning, “Nano Banana” popped into her head. The next thing they knew, the model had gone viral, and people kept using the playful name, so Google ultimately embraced it in public.