Image Playground will generate images based on provided photos and other inputs, but the results leave a lot to be desired
Generative AI is not Apple’s strong suit, but Image Playground, the tool responsible for horrific AI avatar generation and Genmoji, should see significant improvements with the OS 27 cycle.
Apple announced Apple Intelligence features that had to be delayed in 2024, and one of them should have been Image Playground. While the other AI tools were of passable usefulness and quality, the image generation tool still leaves a lot to be desired.
According to the “Power On” newsletter from Bloomberg, the Image Playground app should see a “big boost” from Apple’s upgraded Apple Foundation Models. It’s an obvious statement given that Gemini is being distilled into Apple’s models, and one of Gemini’s specialties is image generation.
However, even as Apple’s image generation feature improves, its models will still likely lag behind competing options by some margin. Users that want more oomph behind their image generation in Image Playground will be able to use third-party models of their choosing.
Image generation is bad AI
While the results are often unfortunate, Image Playground is more of a proof-of-concept than a useful tool in its current form. Apple presented it as a way to turn your mom into an AI-slop superhero for what would be a simply terrible birthday message.
While no one on Earth should use Image Playground for that function, it can be somewhat entertaining the same way other gen AI models have been. Using it to see how it might interpret a specific person or prompt can be amusing, but the output isn’t something anyone could or should rely on for anything beyond a giggle in an iMessage group chat.
The only good thing about Image Playground output (when using Apple’s models) is that it’s either on device or in Private Cloud Compute servers that run on renewable energy. While generative slop is loaded with moral quandaries, that’s one area Image Playground doesn’t suffer from.
Genmoji is the true winner in Image Playground. While it isn’t a function I’ve used much, it has enough guardrails that it can make some decent results.
Even if Image Playground is able to one day achieve Pixar or Ghibli-level results with on-device AI, there’s the argument that all gen AI is bad for humanity. One area of image generation Apple will no doubt stay away from is the ability to produce photorealistic output, which can lead to problems like deepfakes.
OS 27 getting new Apple Foundation Models
iOS 27 is expected to make Genmoji more proactive in the system by suggesting premade options in the text suggestion box. Shared Genmoji become available to the people you send them to, so everyone can get some use out of that weed emoji.
Apple’s weakest offerings in AI are its generative functions, however, they’re fully optional and easily ignored. There is no doubt Apple will continue to pursue better image generation, but if that’s something you want to do, you might want to stick to other apps.
That said, Image Playground could prove much better in OS 27 and earn its place as a useful toolset. The app itself is fine, but Image Playground also exists outside of the app as an extension interface in places like Notes and Freeform.
If Apple can make Image Playground a useful tool that can run on devices with Apple’s arguably somewhat ethical AI models, then I welcome it. Though improvements could mean turning the tool into a plagiarism machine, which will create a whole different set of issues.
People that want to perform these functions are going to seek out tools that offer them. If gen AI must exist to meet consumer expectations, then Apple should have a good offering.
These fake images that lack artistic ingenuity or integrity are getting created no matter what. So, if some of them can be made with ethically sourced AI, local models running on a device’s battery, or on private servers powered by renewable energy, I’d say it is a net positive.
The ability to choose third-party models for Image Playground through a system API will prove interesting. However, once you’ve sent your data to that third-party, all bets are off from an ethical and privacy-oriented standpoint.
At least you can make a plagiarized Ghibli avatar for social media instead of paying a human to make one for you, I guess.



