Google is rolling out a new feature in its AI Mode search tool that lets you create interactive diagrams and visual models for free. Users of Google Search will soon be able to ask the AI to build interactive visuals that help explain complex topics, without paying extra.
The feature is coming to all users this summer. Right now, it’s only available to people paying for AI Mode Pro or Ultra subscriptions, but Google is making it free for everyone.
What can you actually do with it?
You ask AI Mode a question, and it generates an interactive visual you can play with. Google’s example: ask about different soccer formations, and the tool creates a diagram where you can click and adjust to see how each formation works. Below the diagram, you get extra information to dig deeper.
This is useful for learning. Instead of reading text alone or looking at a static image, you can actually interact with what you’re trying to understand.
Why this matters for you
If you use Google to research topics for work, school, or just curiosity, this saves time. You don’t need to hunt for separate learning apps or videos. You ask Google once, get an interactive explanation, and move on.
For students, this could help with subjects like science, maths, or social studies. Instead of imagining how something works, you can see it move on your phone or laptop.
For professionals, this could speed up explaining ideas to colleagues or clients. Instead of describing a process in words, you show an interactive diagram.
When and how to use it
This summer, open Google Search on your phone or computer, tap the AI Mode button (if it shows up in your region), and ask your question. Describe what you want to visualize, and the AI will try to build it for you.
One catch: Google hasn’t said whether this feature will work in all countries or languages yet. The rollout timeline and regional availability remain to be confirmed.
What to do now: If you’re a student or someone who learns online often, bookmark this. When it launches, test it with topics you find hard to understand. Start simple (like asking about water cycles or business structures) to see how well it explains things visually.




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