It's also worth considering if you want to try different AI models without committing to each one individually. Access to Nano Banana Pro alone is a decent draw, especially for small business owners who want Google-quality image generation without going to a separate tool. That said, Dzine is not built for developers or large teams, and some of the more advanced features do take time to get used to.
I tested Dzine and the Nano Banana Pro model with a prompt I use regularly across different AI tools: Create an image of two people looking at each other and shaking hands, one a cyborg, one a woman, with a space background and a friendly mood.
The result was solid. The image matched the brief, the composition made sense, and the space background looked realistic rather than cheap.
What impressed me more than the output itself was what came next. Once the image was generated, Dzine gave me a full menu of things I could do with it: edit it through a chat interface, take it into a dedicated image editor, turn it into a short video, use a lip sync feature, swap faces, or enhance and upscale. That range of options in one place is genuinely useful if you want to do more than just generate and download.
The feature that stood out most, and one I have not seen done quite like this anywhere else, is Expression Edit. It lets you adjust the facial expression of a character in your image using sliders: eye openness, eye gaze direction, eyebrow height, wink, lip openness. I tried the eyebrow adjustment on the cyborg character and it worked really well. The change looked natural rather than distorted, which is not always the case with this kind of editing. I will drop a screenshot below so you can see the difference.
After the initial result, I wanted to take it further and try the image-to-image feature. Dzine has a catalog of styles you can apply to an existing image, and I picked one called Metallic Fluid. It generated four variations, each applying the style a little differently, and interestingly each one shifted the characters' personas slightly too and the visual results were nothing like the original. From each of those four variations, you can then apply any of Dzine's other tools individually on top: the image editor, AI video, lip sync, face swap, enhance and upscale. So one starting image can go in a lot of different directions without you having to start from scratch.
Dzine offers a limited free trial: you can test the platform for 7 days when signing up with a credit card, plus a free plan available for 7 days. The free plan gives you 50 credits to start, which is enough to get a feel for the platform and run a few tests.
Does Dzine include Nano Banana Pro? Yes. Nano Banana Pro, Google's Gemini 3 Pro image model, is one of the models available inside Dzine. You can switch between it and other models like Flux and Google Imagen depending on what you are creating.
What AI models does Dzine support? Dzine gives you access to several AI models in one platform, including Flux, Google Imagen, and Nano Banana Pro. You choose the model before generating, which means you can compare outputs without needing separate subscriptions.
What is the Expression Edit feature in Dzine? Expression Edit lets you adjust the facial expression of a character in a generated image using sliders. You can control eye openness, gaze direction, eyebrow height, wink, and lip openness. Changes are applied directly to the image without regenerating it from scratch.
What other tools does Dzine include? Alongside image creation, Dzine includes a chat-based image editor, a standalone image editor, AI video, lip sync, face swap, enhance and upscale, background removal, generative fill, and a style catalog for image-to-image transformations. All of these sit inside the same canvas workspace.
Can Dzine create videos as well as static images? Yes. Dzine includes text-to-video and image-to-video tools, as well as a lip sync feature that lets you animate a character's mouth to match audio. These are available on the Creator plan and above.
