Trader consensus on Polymarket heavily favors a new Gemini reasoning flagship release by June 30, with 98% implied probability, reflecting Google's rapid iteration cycle on large language models amid intensifying competition from OpenAI's GPT-5 series and Anthropic's Claude Opus 4. No major model launch has occurred since Gemini 3.1 Pro in February 2026, which improved problem-solving but lags frontier benchmarks like BridgeBench Reasoning behind rivals. Recent Gemini Intelligence rollout on Android devices emphasizes proactive agentic features using existing models, while leaks suggest "Omni" or Gemini 3.2/3.5 in testing for enhanced multimodal reasoning. Google I/O 2026 on May 19 looms as the key catalyst, potentially previewing timelines or capabilities that could affirm or delay expectations, given historical slips in AI product rollouts.
Experimental AI-generated summary referencing Polymarket data. This is not trading advice and plays no role in how this market resolves. · Updated$80,764 Vol.
May 15
1%
May 22
79%
May 31
80%
June 30
97%
$80,764 Vol.
May 15
1%
May 22
79%
May 31
80%
June 30
97%
Qualifying models must be positioned by Google as a next-generation, reasoning-focused flagship within the Gemini model line. For example, qualifying models include newly released or newly made generally available (GA) reasoning-focused flagship models (e.g, Gemini 3.1 GA), or any new Pro, Deep Think, or Ultra variants (e.g., Gemini 3.2 Pro, Gemini 3.4 Deep Think, Gemini 4 Ultra).
Models explicitly positioned for speed, efficiency, or low-cost inference that compromise reasoning capability will NOT qualify. This includes, but is not limited to, variants such as Gemini Flash, Flash-lite, Nano, or similar lightweight or latency-optimized models, even if released under a new Gemini version number.
Specialized models for non-text modalities such as video generation (e.g., Veo), image generation (e.g., Imagen, Nano Banana), music generation (e.g., Lyria), or robotics (e.g., Gemini Robotics) will NOT qualify, even if released under a qualifying Gemini version number.
A qualifying model must be launched and publicly accessible, including via open beta or open rolling waitlist signups. A closed beta or any form of private access will not suffice. The release must be either clearly defined and publicly announced by Google as being accessible to the general public or otherwise made publicly accessible and explicitly labeled within the company's official website. Labeling errors, placeholder text, or version names displayed on the website that do not correspond to a model that is actually accessible to the general public will not qualify.
The primary resolution source for this market will be official information from Google, with additional verification from a consensus of credible reporting.
Market Opened: Apr 30, 2026, 10:27 AM ET
Resolver
0x65070BE91...Qualifying models must be positioned by Google as a next-generation, reasoning-focused flagship within the Gemini model line. For example, qualifying models include newly released or newly made generally available (GA) reasoning-focused flagship models (e.g, Gemini 3.1 GA), or any new Pro, Deep Think, or Ultra variants (e.g., Gemini 3.2 Pro, Gemini 3.4 Deep Think, Gemini 4 Ultra).
Models explicitly positioned for speed, efficiency, or low-cost inference that compromise reasoning capability will NOT qualify. This includes, but is not limited to, variants such as Gemini Flash, Flash-lite, Nano, or similar lightweight or latency-optimized models, even if released under a new Gemini version number.
Specialized models for non-text modalities such as video generation (e.g., Veo), image generation (e.g., Imagen, Nano Banana), music generation (e.g., Lyria), or robotics (e.g., Gemini Robotics) will NOT qualify, even if released under a qualifying Gemini version number.
A qualifying model must be launched and publicly accessible, including via open beta or open rolling waitlist signups. A closed beta or any form of private access will not suffice. The release must be either clearly defined and publicly announced by Google as being accessible to the general public or otherwise made publicly accessible and explicitly labeled within the company's official website. Labeling errors, placeholder text, or version names displayed on the website that do not correspond to a model that is actually accessible to the general public will not qualify.
The primary resolution source for this market will be official information from Google, with additional verification from a consensus of credible reporting.
Resolver
0x65070BE91...Trader consensus on Polymarket heavily favors a new Gemini reasoning flagship release by June 30, with 98% implied probability, reflecting Google's rapid iteration cycle on large language models amid intensifying competition from OpenAI's GPT-5 series and Anthropic's Claude Opus 4. No major model launch has occurred since Gemini 3.1 Pro in February 2026, which improved problem-solving but lags frontier benchmarks like BridgeBench Reasoning behind rivals. Recent Gemini Intelligence rollout on Android devices emphasizes proactive agentic features using existing models, while leaks suggest "Omni" or Gemini 3.2/3.5 in testing for enhanced multimodal reasoning. Google I/O 2026 on May 19 looms as the key catalyst, potentially previewing timelines or capabilities that could affirm or delay expectations, given historical slips in AI product rollouts.
Experimental AI-generated summary referencing Polymarket data. This is not trading advice and plays no role in how this market resolves. · Updated
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