A new trend involving Google’s Nano Banana Pro has taken over X, and it has become a major topic of conversation among users. The recently launched tool is being widely tested, and a particular experiment has captured the attention of the platform, drawing enthusiastic reactions.

The trend began when Omar Sanseviero, Developer Experience Lead at Google DeepMind, shared a post on X (formerly Twitter). He wrote, “Create an image of 45°58′35″N 7°39′31″E at sunset”. The prompt led Nano Banana Pro to generate an image instantly, which triggered curiosity among users.

Following his post, more people started sharing their own coordinates and requests under the thread, and the tool continued to deliver images that matched their prompts.

Some users were busy experimenting with different locations, while others expressed concern about delays or the absence of a reply. One user commented, “it doesn’t do it when we ask it. I wonder if you guys programmed it to only work for internal guys???” Another wrote, “I've tried it. It only works with popular places. If I've input a random street in a mid big town it gets completely lost and generates its main train station for example.”

A little later, Omar returned with another post and wrote, “Folks are not believing my coordinates generation because of a famous mountain. So let's try again. @NanoBanana Generate an image of -12.12699442902481, -77.03668273995086 with samurais running around, at the sunset”. The tool responded once more with an image, surprising users yet again.

This led people to question how the system was producing such results. Some asked, “Is it just recalling the location from its training data? Or using a tool?” Another user wondered, “Is it using Google Search Grounding?”

Nano Banana Pro has continued generating images based on user requests, and the responses have left X users amazed as the trend grows rapidly across the platform.