Recent satellite images and reports reveal that Gaza City before the 2023-2025 conflict was a densely populated urban area with homes, schools, hospitals, parks, sports fields, and agricultural lands. It was home to around 775,000 people and served as the main economic and cultural hub of the Gaza Strip. After two years of intense warfare starting from October 2023, Gaza City has suffered catastrophic destruction. Reports estimate that about 70-80% of the buildings have been damaged or destroyed. Entire neighborhoods have been leveled, including residential blocks, hospitals, schools, religious buildings, and cultural heritage sites. Parks and sports fields have vanished, replaced by rubble and debris. The population has drastically reduced due to deaths and evacuation, with many civilians displaced to overcrowded tent settlements in the southern Gaza Strip. The infrastructure collapse has created a severe humanitarian crisis with shortages of water, sanitation, healthcare, and food. Gaza City now largely consists of ruins with remnants of roadways visible beneath the destruction. In summary, Gaza City has transformed from a densely inhabited, vibrant city into a largely uninhabitable and devastated landscape due to continuous military operations and airstrikes over the past two years.