When OpenAI pulled the sheet off GPT-5, it wasn’t shy about saying this was its most capable model yet. The pitch was that it included everything you loved about the past iterations, plus much more, and all in one seamless form. The result is supposed to be able to understand, create, reason, and switch effortlessly between giving quick answers and writing deep, thoughtful explanations. GPT-5 can process text, images, audio, and video in the same conversation, remember more than you probably do, and adjust its style and personality on the fly. And you’d better like it because it is not only the default model for ChatGPT, it’s the only one accessible for those without an Enterprise subscription.

Gemini 2.5 Flash is the default for Google’s rival AI chatbot. As the name suggests, it’s built for speed, but that doesn’t mean it lacks some power. It’s multimodal and can handle large tasks, but is tuned for near-instant responses and high efficiency. Despite that, I questioned how much of a difference GPT-5’s power would make to the average AI chatbot user, and decided to give the two of them a few tests to see what they came up with.

Party time

(Image credit: Pexels – Ylanite Koppens)

My child is too young for a fancy party, but I can easily imagine wanting to make a seemingly elaborate party for him and his friends that doesn’t actually require a party planner. So I asked the two AI chatbots to “Plan a budget-friendly but magical dinosaur-themed birthday party for a seven-year-old, including activities, food, and decorations.”



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