GPT Image 2 Is Here: 99% Text Rendering Accuracy—Finally, It Can Write Properly
Let me start with a question: When you have used AI image generation, have you ever been frustrated by “ghost scribbles” where the text was completely wrong?
I have been there. I once used an AI image tool and asked it to generate “a T-shirt with Hello World printed on it.” What came out was “Hel1o W0r1d”—all the letters were wrong. At that moment, I thought, this thing is still far from truly usable.
But GPT Image 2, launched by OpenAI on April 21, makes me feel like this might finally be solvable.
What Does 99% Text Rendering Accuracy Actually Mean?
According to OpenAI official data, GPT Image 2 achieves 99% text rendering accuracy. What does this translate to in practice?
It means when you ask it to generate an image with text, there is a 99% probability the text will be correct. The remaining 1% is most likely because your description was not clear enough—not because the model failed.
It also supports 4K resolution output. For designers who need high-quality assets, this is a real, tangible requirement.
From “Barely Watchable” to “Actually Usable”
I have said before that the biggest problem with AI image generation is not whether the image looks pretty—it is whether it accurately expresses your intent. Text rendering is the perfect example.
Previously, AI image generation achieved around 60-70% success rate for text, with high error rates—missing letters, spelling mistakes, font chaos were all common issues. Now at 99% accuracy, it is basically at a “usable” level.
This is not just technological progress—it is a shift in product positioning. OpenAI positioning for ChatGPT Images 2.0 has moved from “creative tool” to “deliverable visual workflow platform.” In other words, they are starting to take “output quality” seriously.
Multilingual Capabilities Also Improved
According to official descriptions, GPT Image 2 multilingual capabilities have also significantly improved. Chinese text generation previously often suffered from font chaos and character errors—this time it is reportedly much better.
I have not tested this personally yet. I will report back once I have run some trials.
Has anyone tried ChatGPT Images 2.0? Is the text rendering really that impressive?