Gemini
Google's assistant — huge context and built right into Workspace.
Standout features
Gemini writes inside the Google tools you already use — Docs, Gmail and the web — with room for very long source material.
Worldwide search interest, indexed 0–100 · Google Trends.
Gemini is Google’s AI writing assistant — strongest for people already living in Google Workspace.
- From Google (built by Google DeepMind).
- “Help me write” inside Docs and Gmail.
- Among the largest context windows for long material.
- Free tier plus paid Google AI plans.
Big context and Google integration are the draw.
- Drafts, rewrites and summarizes across formats.
- Deep ties to Docs, Gmail and the wider Workspace.
- Multimodal input — text, images and files.
- Pulls on Google’s search and knowledge.
A free tier, with paid Google AI plans.
Gemini fits Google-ecosystem writers.
- People who write in Google Docs and Gmail.
- Long-document work that needs big context.
- Writers who want research and drafting together.
- Non-Google users with no Workspace tie-in.
- Those who want the most natural prose (Claude) or biggest ecosystem (ChatGPT).
No tool is perfect — the trade-offs to weigh:
- Best inside Google — less compelling off it.
- Prose can be uneven versus the leaders.
- Features shift fast as Google iterates.
- Quality varies by underlying model.
- ✓Built into Google Docs and Gmail
- ✓One of the largest context windows
- ✓Multimodal input
- ✓Free tier plus competitive paid plans
- ✓Ties into Google search and knowledge
- ✕Most value inside the Google ecosystem
- ✕Prose can be uneven vs ChatGPT/Claude
- ✕Features change quickly
- ✕Quality varies by model
Workspace users like that Gemini drafts and rewrites right where they already write, and the big context window helps with long material. Critiques center on prose that can feel less polished than ChatGPT or Claude and a feature set that shifts quickly. Sentiment is positive, strongest among people invested in Google’s tools.
Gemini is built by Google (Alphabet), developed by Google DeepMind.
Company figures are drawn from public disclosures and reputable trackers (gathered Jun 2026). User and revenue numbers are estimates and move fast.
Pick up to two other coding tools to see them head-to-head on the same rubric.