
Google Launches Ai Mode In Search With Gemini 2.5 For Smarter Results Across U.s.
Hold on to your search bars — Google just flipped the script on how we hunt for answers online. The tech giant has rolled out a sleek new AI Mode across its U.S. search engine, and it’s basically like chatting with your super-smart friend who knows everything (except they don’t ghost you when you ask dumb questions).
Unveiled at Google I/O 2025 — think Coachella but for coders — this shiny upgrade makes your old search habits look downright prehistoric. Type in a question and instead of a messy list of links, boom — you get an instant, chat-style response powered by Gemini 2.5. It’s like ChatGPT and Google Search had a baby.
Click the “AI” tab at the top of the results page and welcome to a whole new world — you can ask follow-ups, change topics mid-stream, or deep-dive into answers without ever leaving the page. Google’s calling it “conversational search,” but let’s be real — it’s basically Google with a personality.
CBS News says the feature “feels more like a chat with a human than a traditional search experience,” and they’re not wrong. No more scrolling past SEO-packed blog posts just to find out how to fix your Wi-Fi.
And yes, AI Overviews are still a thing — but they’ve now gone global. Google says they’re live in over 200 countries and speak 40+ languages. So whether you’re searching in English, Español, or Klingon (okay, not really), you’re covered.
There’s a new Deep Search tool in testing, which dishes out serious deep-dive content for the data-hungry. And Search Live lets you search using live video feeds. Think FaceTime meets Google — just way less awkward.
Then there’s the shopping update. You can now set price alerts and let AI handle the checkout for you. Yep, it can auto-buy your wishlist when that dress you’ve been stalking finally drops below $50. (Sorry, wallet.)
Reddit wasn’t thrilled. According to Business Insider, the site’s stock dipped after the AI Mode demo, with investors worried that fewer people will click through to Reddit if Google’s just summarizing everything for you.
And New York Magazine points out a bigger concern: is this the beginning of the end for the open web? If AI gives you all the answers, why visit any other sites?
Still, users seem impressed. Investopedia says this could be a game-changer for complex queries. And Search Engine Journal notes that Google is clearly aiming to stay ahead of the AI curve — and maybe even scare off that ChatGPT tab you’ve been flirting with.