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OpenAI's ChatGPT Images 2.0 is here and it does multilingual text, full infographics, slides, maps, even manga — seemingly flawlessly

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It's been only a few months since OpenAI released its last big improvement to AI image generations in ChatGPT and through its application programming interface (API) — namely, a new image generation model known as GPT-Image-1.5 , released in December 2025, which brought about improved instruction following, colors, and lighting. Now, after weeks of testing, the company that kicked off the generative AI boom is unveiling a far more dramatic and even more impressive update: ChatGPT Images 2.0 , which has been available not-so-secretly for several weeks on LM Arena AI , a third-party testing platform used by OpenAI and other major AI model providers to get early feedback, under the name "duct tape." Throughout that time, it's already blown early users' minds with its capacity to generate long blocks of text or disparate text panels within the same image, its insanely realistic generation of user interfaces and screenshots from popular websites and platforms, its reproduction of real life figures like OpenAI co-founder and CEO Sam Altman, and its ability to perform web research and put the results into the image itself. Now today, it's officially rolling out to ChatGPT users on all tiers, and OpenAI confirms it can also produce floor plans, image grids and sets of many smaller images, and character models from multiple angles, and apply almost all of these features to user-uploaded imagery as well. The update, which encompasses the new gpt-image-2 model for API users and a suite of "Thinking" features for ChatGPT subscribers, represents a fundamental shift in how the company views visual media. As the official release notes state, "Images are a language, not decoration. A good image does what a good sentence does—it selects, arranges, and reveals". OpenAI did not release benchmarks to us ahead of time on ChatGPT Images 2.0, but it is safe to say the model is performing at the "state-of-the-art" based on all the outputs I've seen. The move comes…