Banana Blitz: Google’s Nano Banana AI Just Gave Adobe’s Firefly a Nasty Shock

Downloads don’t lie. Not long after Google rolled out its Nano Banana image generator inside Gemini 2.5 Flash, something curious happened—Adobe’s Firefly started losing steam fast.

Reports show that Firefly’s downloads nosedived more than 50% in just a week, right as Google’s numbers shot up.

Seems like users took one look at Google’s shiny new toy and said, “Yep, that’s my ride now.”

The figures paint a wild picture. In early October, Gemini’s installs were up by more than 300%, while Firefly had tanked by nearly 70%.

Even in the U.S. alone, Gemini jumped almost 90% month-over-month as Firefly sank over 80%.

Firefly had just been celebrating a summer surge—150% growth in August—and then, poof, gone.

It’s the kind of reversal that makes even seasoned analysts raise an eyebrow. You can check out the full breakdown in the Business Insider report on how Google’s Nano Banana AI tool has already hurt Adobe’s Firefly downloads.

The thing is, Google didn’t just make a new image generator—it buried it in every corner of its ecosystem.

The Nano Banana tool is now showing up right inside Google Search and NotebookLM, letting you generate or edit images straight from the search bar or your notes.

It’s a clever move: make creation invisible, something you stumble upon naturally while working or browsing.

According to a report on how Google just dropped its Nano Banana AI image generator into your search results and notes, people can even turn a quick search into a digital artwork in seconds.

Soon, the feature is expected to hit Google Photos too, so you’ll be able to remix your pictures without leaving the app.

Even more interesting, the Nano Banana rollout has gone international, appearing in beta versions of Search and NotebookLM across several regions.

Reports like this one detailing Google’s Nano Banana expansion into Search and NotebookLM suggest the company is testing localized prompts and visual styles to keep the tool feeling personal and adaptable.

It’s like Google’s trying to make AI art feel less like a lab experiment and more like an everyday habit.

Adobe, meanwhile, isn’t taking it lying down. The company actually integrated Nano Banana as one of the partner models inside Firefly to keep pace, but that hasn’t stopped the user drain.

Photoshop’s beta now even lets you use Google’s Nano Banana directly in the Generative Fill tool, which is a fascinating twist—Google’s model living inside Adobe’s walls.

Still, as Firefly’s numbers drop and stock pressures mount, it’s clear Adobe’s old dominance in creative AI is wobbling.

From where I sit, this isn’t just about one app beating another. It’s about where people live digitally.

When your AI is baked into things folks already use every day—Search, Notes, Photos—you don’t need to convince them to adopt it.

They just… do. It’s convenience wrapped in magic. And honestly, Firefly feels like the fancy studio everyone admires but rarely visits, while Nano Banana’s the cool neighbor with a backyard concert every weekend.

If I were Adobe, I’d stop pretending the war is over models and start focusing on how people want to create.

Make the tools faster, looser, maybe a little more human. Because if this trend keeps up, Google’s little “banana” might just peel away the rest of the market before anyone can blink.