Gaming content covers game-inspired imagery, and it currently holds one carefully chosen template: the PS2 Game Cover, a parody PlayStation 2 box art generator whose example mashes Grand Theft Auto’s cover language with Shrek. It nails the details that sell the joke — the era-correct cover layout, the logo block, the rating label, the slightly grimy early-2000s render style — so the result reads instantly as a game case you would have found on a shelf in 2004.
It is also one of the most editable templates in the gallery. The prompt’s structure is visible on the template page, so you can swap the featured character for your own (describe them in text, or upload a reference photo in Art Studio), rewrite the title and tagline, or push the whole design toward a different console generation. Short, quoted title text and the Nano Banana model tend to give the most readable cover typography.
One template is a thin category, and we will not pretend otherwise — this gallery mirrors the awesome-nano-banana community collection, and as contributors add more gaming prompts (trading cards, pixel art scenes, RPG character sheets), they will appear here with the same full-prompt and CC-BY-4.0 attribution treatment.
A parody PlayStation 2 box art image — the example mashes up a GTA-style cover with Shrek — complete with the era’s cover layout, logo placement, and rating-label look. It is a nostalgia piece: the goal is an image that feels like a case you would have found on a shelf in 2004.
Yes. Copy the prompt and replace the subject with your own character description, or upload a reference photo in Art Studio and instruct the model to feature that person on the box art. Changing the title text, tagline, and genre styling is just a prompt edit away.
Parody enjoys some protection in many places, but console logos, game brands, and film characters are trademarks of their owners. Posting a clearly humorous mashup for fun is common practice; selling merchandise with those marks is a different matter. When in doubt, strip recognizable logos or get legal advice.
This gallery mirrors the awesome-nano-banana community collection, which keeps growing. As contributors publish new gaming prompts — trading cards, pixel scenes, character sheets — they will be added here with the same full-prompt and attribution treatment. Check back, or follow the collection source linked on each template page.
Box art lives or dies on readable text, and Nano Banana is currently the strongest of the available models at rendering short titles and labels. Keep the title brief, put quotes around exact text in your prompt, and regenerate if a word comes out garbled — text accuracy varies between runs.
Pick any template above, or open Art Studio and start from a blank prompt.
Open Art Studio