Gamma vs Lucide
Side-by-side trajectory, velocity, and editorial themes.
Coasting on a Nano Banana Pro and Generate API push - recent releases are pure design polish.
Gamma is an AI deck-generation tool whose last six months of shipping focus almost entirely on output fidelity - layout density, gradients, code-block typography, theme-aware logos, AI animations as an image source. Its two directional moves of the past year - wiring in Google's Nano Banana Pro image model and graduating the Generate API to GA - both landed in early November 2025 and have not seen visible follow-up in the changelog. Public cadence has slowed from roughly weekly last fall to roughly monthly.
The arc has shifted from capability expansion to output refinement. From the Generate API GA and the Nano Banana model swap in November, the team has moved into a steady drip of design controls - six columns, gradients, syntax highlighting, adaptive logos - that make generated decks more presentable without changing what the product is. Indexing-on-Google for Gamma-hosted sites is the one recent move hinting at a broader shape, treating the 'Gamma site' output mode as a destination rather than a sharing fallback.
The next directional release is most likely on the Generate API surface - new endpoints, first-party integrations, or partner workflows - since it is the only recent move with leverage that hasn't been built on. A second plausible line is more dynamic in-deck content (interactive code, more animation primitives) given how much recent work has gone into the look of generated output.
Lucide is in a steady icon-addition cadence — eight minor releases in six weeks, mostly community PRs.
Lucide is releasing roughly twice a week along the 1.x line, with each minor adding 1–6 community-contributed icons (blender, broccoli, sticky note variants, repeat-off, waves-vertical, folder-bookmark, astroid, heart-x, layers-minus, bell-check) and refining existing ones (text-cursor, landmark, candy-cane, volleyball). Framework adapters (Svelte, Vue, Angular, React) receive small fixes alongside. There is no structural work in this window — it is a contributor-flow optimization.
The project sits in healthy steady-state. Low-friction PR throughput, regular minor versions, and no large refactors suggest Lucide has settled into being the default fork-and-extend icon library for designers and the maintainers are protecting that contributor pipeline rather than pushing a roadmap. Framework adapter parity is being maintained in lockstep with the core icon set.
Expect another 1–2 icons (or refinement PRs) per minor over the next few weeks, plus a framework-adapter patch as upstream Svelte/Vite/Vue dependencies shift. No 2.0 cut is signaled in this window.
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