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Sora and Nano Banana Pro experience throttling during holiday surge

OpenAI and Google clamp down on free AI use as servers reach capacity.

By
Shubham Sawarkar
Shubham Sawarkar
ByShubham Sawarkar
Editor-in-Chief
I’m a tech enthusiast who loves exploring gadgets, trends, and innovations. With certifications in CISCO Routing & Switching and Windows Server Administration, I bring a sharp...
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Nov 28, 2025, 7:37 AM EST
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In this photo illustration, the Sora app (OpenAI) logo is seen displayed on a smartphone screen.
Photo: SOPA Images Limited / Alamy
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If you were hoping to spend the holiday weekend making goofy, eerie, or astonishingly polished AI videos and images, consider this your gentle nudge to plan ahead. Two of the buzziest consumer tools in AI — OpenAI’s Sora for video and Google’s Nano Banana Pro for images — have quietly had their free-tier allowances tightened as demand outstripped the companies’ ability to keep up. The change landed bluntly: fewer free generations, more nudges toward paid access, and a reminder that even the biggest AI services run on finite, brutally expensive hardware.

OpenAI’s Sora — the company’s consumer-facing video-generation suite — is now limiting free users to six video generations per day. The change was announced in blunt fashion by Bill Peebles, the Sora lead, who joked that “our GPUs are melting” as a shorthand for the reality underneath: video generation is shockingly compute-heavy and expensive to run at scale. Peebles also flagged that users can buy “extra gens” if they want to go past the daily cap, part of a broader move to monetize heavy usage rather than subsidize it indefinitely. Paid ChatGPT tiers, OpenAI says, are not affected by this particular cut, though the company has not published a neat table of limits for every paid plan.

Google’s response looks similar but slightly different in shape. Nano Banana Pro — the image-generation model that arrived only last week and quickly became popular for its tight prompts and high-quality output — has seen its free daily images fall from three to two. The change was noticed by 9to5Google and appears alongside a broader shifting of Gemini 3 Pro access for free users into a looser “basic access” band, where exact prompt counts or guarantees can fluctuate depending on load. In plain terms: Google will let you play, but only up to a point — and that point can move without formal warning. The company’s support pages make that variability explicit.

That “variability” is no accident. These models run on GPU farms, and GPUs are both expensive and in limited supply. When a feature or model catches fire — as both Sora and Nano Banana Pro clearly did after their public debuts — the spike in requests can overwhelm capacity, slow responses, and balloon costs. Companies face an awkward calculus: keep things generous and risk massive bills and a poor experience for everyone, or curb free usage and steer heavy users toward paid plans that better cover operating costs. OpenAI’s “buy extra gens” option and Google’s tiered access nudges are both essentially the same answer to that problem.

For users, the immediate experience is simple and a little annoying. If you relied on being able to churn out images or videos all afternoon, you’ll now need to pick your moments: save the high-priority prompts for the window when you’re ready to edit, or spend your allotment on the single best idea you have rather than three or four experiments. If you absolutely need more, the options are obvious — paid plans, credits, or switching to less resource-intensive models — but those choices introduce cost and friction that change how casual creators experiment with the technology.

There’s a broader business story here, too. For months now, the conversation around consumer AI has shifted from “wow, look what it can do” toward “how do we pay for this at scale?” Startups and hyperscalers are experimenting with subscription tiers, per-use credits, and priority queues as ways to fund the enormous energy, hardware, and engineering costs baked into these systems. OpenAI’s decision to sell extra Sora credits and Google’s tiered Gemini access are examples of the model maturing: free access becomes a kind of demo, while the predictable, heavy, or commercial use is expected to pay. That pivot is user-facing, yes, but it’s also an infrastructure story about how these companies plan to keep their lights on and servers humming.

There are trade-offs. Capping free use protects latency and uptime for the broader base, but it also limits serendipitous creativity and the low-stakes tinkering that often leads to surprising breakthroughs. It can push hobbyists and journalists toward paywalls, and it reshapes expectations about what “free” AI even means. For educators, small creators, and people who use these tools for quick prototypes, the new constraints may be a real deterrent — or an argument to build workflows that are less GPU-heavy and more schedule-aware.

Technically speaking, the solution path is predictable but slow: build more datacenters, buy more GPUs, and optimize models to be cheaper per query. That takes time and money, and it doesn’t make for a great immediate user experience. In the meantime, expect more nudges toward paid tiers and sharper communication about “best-effort” free access. The companies themselves have signaled this is likely to be an ongoing balancing act — limits “may change frequently and without notice” in Google’s wording — which is both honest and unsettling for anyone who depends on consistent access.

If you’re trying to be pragmatic right now, treat free generations like a precious resource. Sketch your idea, pick the best prompts, and reserve paid credits only for the runs you can’t live without. If you’re watching from the outside, these throttles are a useful reminder that the next phase of consumer AI will be governed less by technological possibility and more by business decisions about who pays and how. The holiday weekend might have been the perfect laboratory for experimentation; instead, it’s become a stress test for how these companies scale joy.


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