Nigeria’s digital creator economy just received a high-tech injection. On Thursday, February 26, Google officially rolled out its advanced AI image generation suite across the country, integrated directly into Google Search and Google Lens. The move puts professional-grade design tools into the hands of millions of Nigerians through the standard Google app and mobile browsers they already use.
At the heart of this expansion is Nano Banana 2, Google’s most agile and precise image model to date. Unlike previous iterations of generative AI that often felt like black boxes, this new model is built to be lightning-fast and remarkably grounded in real-world facts.
For the first time, Nigerian users can generate images that don’t just look artistic but accurate and realistic. By referencing the massive library of Google Images during the rendering process, Nano Banana 2 can accurately depict real-world landmarks and specific brands. Whether a student is visualising a project set at the National Theatre or a designer is mocking up a shopfront in Yaba, the AI maintains a level of factual integrity previously missing from synthetic media.
Nano Banana 2 generating an image
Perhaps the biggest win for local storytellers is the introduction of character consistency. A common frustration for digital artists has been the AI’s tendency to change a character’s face or clothes between prompts. Nano Banana 2 fixes this, allowing creators to maintain the same protagonist across an entire storyboard or digital comic, a feature set to transform how Nigerian animators and social media influencers build their narratives.
The update isn’t just for artists. Google has specifically optimised the model to handle text with clarity. For the thousands of small business owners navigating Nigeria’s competitive market, this means the ability to create high-quality marketing flyers, greeting cards, and social media assets with readable, integrated text in seconds.
Taiwo Kola-Ogunlade, Google’s Communications and PR Manager for West Africa, noted that the launch is about lowering the barrier to entry for one of the world’s most creative populations.
“We want to make sure the best technology is accessible to everyone. Nigerians are some of the most creative people in the world, and today we’re expanding these tools to give them a new way to express that. You don’t need to be a tech expert to use this—you can simply open the Google App and describe what you want to see, turning a simple thought into a professional visual in seconds.”
The generated image
Acknowledging the risks associated with AI-generated content, Google is leaning heavily into transparency. Every image produced by Nano Banana 2 will carry a digital fingerprint. This includes SynthID, an invisible watermark embedded in the pixels, alongside C2PA metadata. These industry-standard tags ensure that AI-generated visuals can be easily identified, helping to curb the spread of misinformation.
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The features are now live for all users in Nigeria. To start creating, users can simply open the Google app or visit Google.com on a mobile browser and toggle AI Mode in Search or use the creative tools within Google Lens.
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