ChatGPT Images 2.0, launched this week, features advanced text rendering and 'thinking capabilities' for image generation, with demos including desktop screenshots, menus, and football posters.
Social media users have widely shared AI-generated sports posters, fueling concerns that the tool could threaten graphic designers’ jobs by enabling rapid, visually striking outputs from simple prompts.
Critics argue the model produces homogenized styles lacking creative individuality, while designers showcase non-AI work to highlight its unique 'soul,' intensifying debate over AI’s impact on creative professions.
Beyond flawless text, what will it take for AI art to feel truly human?
If AI can generate a logo in 10 minutes, what is a human designer's time now worth?
Will AI's 'thinking' capabilities lead to a future of visually identical brands and marketing?
As AI models get fine-tuned, will the generic 'AI style' finally disappear?
Is the recent Supreme Court ruling on AI copyright the only thing saving designers' jobs?