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You can now walk through AI versions of real places with Google’s Project Genie

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Sundar Pichai stands in front of a Google logo at Google I/O 2021.
This story is part of our complete Google I/O coverage

Google is pushing its experimental AI world-building project into surprisingly realistic territory. The company announced that Project Genie can now use real-world imagery from Google Street View to generate interactive virtual environments, blending real locations with imaginative AI-generated styles.

At its core, Genie is what Google calls a “world model” — an AI system capable of creating explorable digital environments where AI agents, robots, or even users can interact naturally. Until now, those worlds were mostly synthetic. But with this new update, Genie can anchor itself to real places pulled directly from Street View imagery. This is actually where things start feeling like a glimpse into the future of simulation.

Google wants you to wander through AI daydreams

The feature works inside Project Genie, Google’s experimental Labs prototype. Users can now select locations in the U.S. using a Maps pin and then transform those places into stylized AI worlds. That means the Golden Gate Bridge can suddenly become an underwater exploration zone filled with sea life, while the Fort Worth Stockyards can be reimagined as a grainy black-and-white version of the 1920s, complete with saloons and vintage cars.

Users can also customize the characters exploring these worlds, whether that means turning themselves into a comic book hero, an animal, or even a claymation monster. The interesting part here is not just creativity. It is how Google is teaching AI systems to understand real-world geography and environments through simulation.

Google’s bigger AI ambition is becoming clear

Google says Genie has already been used internally for AI research and even by Waymo to simulate realistic driving environments. Grounding those simulations in Street View data could make future AI training dramatically more practical.

Project Genie is rolling out globally to eligible Google AI Ultra subscribers, though Google still considers the platform experimental, which probably explains why the company is being careful not to oversell it just yet.

Shimul Sood
Shimul is a contributor at Digital Trends, with over five years of experience in the tech space.
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