Google’s new Antigravity upgrade wants to kill IDEs forever
Google is doing something totally mind blowing.
They are trying to kill the IDE. For good.
Many people were rightly expecting their Antigravity tool to get some upgrades in this year’s Google I/O — but they had absolutely no idea just how drastic the changes were going to be.
They went from this — what we’ve all been used to for several decades:

to this — literally just this:

And then later on when you start doing some work:

Google can see the writing on the wall. They understand the unstoppable direction the AI software development landscape is heading in.
The coding editor is totally gone.
Something not everyone is very happy about:

A complete transformation from AI assistant to full-fledged AI engineering team.
1. From AI assistant → genius software engineering team
The first version of Antigravity still lived in the IDE world.
Antigravity 2.0 does not.
Google completely stripped away the editor-first experience and rebuilt the system around projects, not repositories.
Instead of opening folders and files, you manage long-running initiatives while AI agents execute the work. Google literally calls the desktop app “unabashedly agent-first.”
The mental model changes completely:
Old world:
Open repo → write code → commit
Antigravity world:
Define goal → deploy agents → orchestrate execution
You’re no longer pairing with an assistant.
You’re managing a software building organization.
2. An entire OS from scratch

This was the moment that shocked the world.
Google DeepMind gave Antigravity 2.0 a single high-level prompt and had it build a functional operating system — FROM SCRATCH.
The numbers were absurd:
- 93 subagents
- 2.6 billion tokens processed
- Completed in 12 hours
- Total cost reportedly under $1,000 in API usage
And then came the live demo.
Google loaded the classic game Doom onto the AI-generated operating system and ran it live on stage.
During the demo, Antigravity was even prompted to generate missing keyboard drivers in real time, instantly extending the OS and making gameplay possible.
Think about what that means.
A multi-agent system coordinated dozens of autonomous workers, built an operating system, compiled it, extended it live, and ran software on top of it.
This is no longer:
“Build me a React component.”
This is:
Autonomous systems engineering at massive scale.
3. Dynamic subagents are a game changer

Most AI systems break when tasks become too large.
Throw enough complexity at a single model and eventually it loses context, forgets state, or collapses under memory pressure.
Google solved this by turning the primary agent into a manager.
Instead of doing everything itself, it dynamically spawns specialized subagents in parallel.
Those agents work independently, finish subtasks, then merge results back into the main workflow. Google highlighted Antigravity’s move toward coordinated multi-agent execution and orchestration across environments.
Like just imagine this beautiful teamwork:
Agent A → architecture
Agent B → UI
Agent C → tests
Agent D → browser validation
Agent E → deployment
All running simultaneously.
The result:
Massive projects stop feeling like giant prompts.
They become distributed systems.
4. Scheduled Tasks keeps AI working on autopilot

One of the most underrated announcements was Scheduled Tasks.
This changes how people interact with AI.
Instead of sitting at your laptop prompting continuously or hacking something together, you can now seamlessly assign recurring work:
“Review analytics every morning at 8 AM.”
“Refactor stale code overnight.”
“Scan for regressions while I sleep.”
The agents run asynchronously in the background without interrupting active workflows.
This moves AI from:
tool you use → system that operates
5. The slash commands reveal what Google thinks AI is actually good at
Google introduced several new command patterns that feel surprisingly honest about AI limitations.
/grill-me
Before touching anything, the agent interrogates you.
It keeps asking clarifying questions until intent becomes crystal clear.
Google is effectively admitting:
Bad prompts create bad autonomous systems.
/goal
This is the opposite.
Full autonomous mode.
Give the objective.
Walk away.
The agent executes until completion without constantly asking permission.
It’s essentially “fire-and-forget engineering.”
/browser
This one is fascinating.
Google openly acknowledged that agents still struggle with deciding when they should search externally.
So instead of pretending the problem is solved, they added an explicit switch:
Turn browsing on.
Give the agent web access.
Continue.
That transparency is rare.
6. Gemini 3.5 Flash is the engine underneath all of this
None of this works without speed.
Antigravity 2.0 runs on Gemini 3.5 Flash, which Google positioned as the model built specifically for agent workflows, coding, and long-horizon tasks.
Google says it delivers major coding improvements and operates 4× faster than competing frontier models, while Antigravity pushes even more performance inside its environment.
Speed matters even more now in this multi-agent era because agents multiply work.
One slow model = waiting.
Ninety-three agents = bottleneck disaster.
3.5 Flash changes the equation.
Antigravity 2.0 isn’t trying to beat Cursor.
It isn’t trying to beat Copilot.
Google is aiming at something bigger:
Replace the software workflow itself.
The IDE is disappearing.
Repositories are becoming projects.
Developers are becoming orchestrators.
And AI is turning into a software engineering organization.



































