

FL Studio 25 to launch with Gopher AI: New ChatGPT-Style Text Support
FL Studio has just unveiled the Beta V3 of FL Studio 25, introducing a host of new additions to the DAW. Alongside improvements to audio clips, export features, and FL Studio Remote, a particularly interesting addition is the FL Studio Gopher—an LLM based on its manual and knowledge base. Similar to ChatGPT, you can now ask questions about FL Studio and music production directly within the DAW.
First introduced in August last year, the Gopher AI is now available as part of the public beta. FL Studio refers to it as Gopher (or “gofer”), a term sometimes used to describe someone whose main role is running errands or performing various unplanned tasks for others. The aim is to help you incorporate AI to speed up your learning and production process, not to replace the creative tools. Interestingly, DeepMind also released a language model with the same name back in 2021.
How to use Gopher AI within FL Studio 25?
Gopher is available within the communications panel alongside News, downloads, notifications, and help. You can also pin the tab so it doesn’t close.
The results are optimized and in-depth, focused within the realm of music production and music making. The results are limited to FL Studio’s manual and knowledge base, so for topics not included in these sources, you might not get an accurate response. It’s really great for finding the right plugins, learning shortcuts, and completing similar tasks.
Privacy Concerns around Gopher AI
The introduction of Gopher AI in FL Studio has sparked privacy concerns among some users, particularly around the security of their creative output. In response, Image-Line has issued a clear statement to reassure its community: Gopher does not access, collect, or use any user-created music, sounds, or project files. According to the company, Gopher functions strictly as a text-based support assistant, pulling information only from public sources like the FL Studio Manual and Knowledge Base. It does not scrape user data or operate within user projects. Furthermore, while Gopher logs anonymized questions and its own answers to help improve the system, these logs are not tied to individual accounts and are reviewed in aggregate. The only exception to this is when users interact with Gopher as part of the support ticket system—here, the pre-ticket conversation may be accessible to staff for better customer assistance. Even then, this data is isolated and not linked back to other logs. Image-Line emphasizes that users are right to be cautious, but maintains that privacy and user ownership of creative content are fundamental to its approach.
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