It is cut in half absolutely, and the power gained is in turn limited by how much power (voltage and current) can be delivered into that reduced impedance while operating in bridged mode.
Basically, what bridged mode does is to put equal but opposite polarity signals into the two output sections of the amplifier (that are normally assigned to each of the two channels), with the speaker being connected between the positive output of one channel and the positive output of the other channel. That results in the voltage across the speaker being twice what it would have been in normal stereo configuration, under the same signal conditions.
By Ohm's Law (voltage = current x resistance) the doubled voltage will cause twice the current to flow through the speaker, and hence through each of the two output amplifier stages (which are essentially in series with each other and the speaker). From the perspective of each amplifier stage, twice the current is flowing that would flow at the same voltage in normal stereo configuration. So from the perspective of each amplifier stage the load impedance has been cut in half, again by Ohm's Law (resistance = voltage/current).
Since power = voltage x current (assuming the voltage and current are in phase, which is to say that the load is assumed to be essentially resistive), which in turn equals (by substitution of the Ohm's Law formula) voltage squared divided by resistance, bridging can potentially provide 4 times the power of normal stereo operation. But that is typically limited to a considerably lower number by peak current capability.
Hope the clarifies more than it confuses!
Regards,
-- Al