The post Google Releases Its Most Powerful AI Model, Gemini 3-Here’s What You Need to Know appeared com. Google released Gemini 3 Pro in a public preview today, calling it the company’s most capable AI model to date. The system handles text, images, audio, and video simultaneously while processing up to 1 million tokens of context-roughly equivalent to 700, 000 words, or about 10 full-length novels. The preview model is available for free for anyone to try here. Google said the model outperformed its predecessor, Gemini 2. 5 Pro, across nearly every benchmark the company tested. On Humanity’s Last Exam, an academic reasoning test, Gemini 3 Pro scored 37. 5% compared to 2. 5 Pro’s 21. 6%. On ARC-AGI-2, a visual reasoning puzzle benchmark, the gap widened further: 31. 1% versus 4. 9%. Of course, the real challenge at this point in the AI race isn’t technical so much as it is gaining commercial market share. Google, which once seemed indomitable in the search space, has given up an enormous amount of ground to OpenAI, which claims some 800 million weekly users ChatGPT versus Gemini, which reportedly has around 650 million monthly users. Google has not said how many weekly numbers it has, but that would be far fewer than its monthly count. Still, the technical achievements of Gemini 3 are impressive. Introducing Gemini 3 our most intelligent model that helps you bring any idea to life. Gemini 3 is our next step on the path toward AGI and has:🧠 State-of-the-art reasoning🖼️ Deep multimodal understanding💻 Powerful vibe coding so you can go from prompt to app in one shot. pic. twitter. com/zG8r95pGcS Google (@Google) November 18, 2025 Gemini 3 Pro uses what Google calls a sparse mixture-of-experts architecture. Instead of activating all 1 trillion-plus parameters for every query, the system routes each input to specialized subnetworks. Only a fraction of the model-the expert at that specific task-runs at any given time, cutting computational costs while. Continue reading Google Releases Its Most Powerful AI Model, Gemini 3—Here’s What You Need to Know→