Tried Google’s Anti-Gravity yesterday — and honestly, I’m impressed.
Google AntiGravity: Software Engineers Best Friend and Worst Competitor
Has anyone tried Antigravity by Google? Thoughts on the IDE platform
How can I achieve a similar effect to Google Gravity without using bloated libraries?
How do I experience Google Gravity?
What’s the purpose of Google Gravity?
Videos
It’s not better than Cursor, but it’s definitely on the same level already. The crazy part? They reached this point in such a short time.
What stood out to me the most:
Speed → It’s unbelievably fast. Feels almost instant.
Execution style → Unlike Cursor’s big monolithic actions, Anti-Gravity breaks things into small multi-step operations, completes them quickly, and keeps iterating.
Product maturity → For something this new, they’ve already matched a surprising number of Cursor-like features.
User experience → The way it thinks, resolves, and implements changes feels super fluid.
If this is Day 1, then the competition in AI coding tools is going to get very interesting.
Edit — the above text itself was generated by Anti-Gravity. I used up my quota completely, and now it’s rate-limited.
Google just dropped Google Gravity, an agentic development platform for software developers, and it basically writes, runs, and tests codes and does bunch of other things that software engineers are doing right now.
This technology can be an incredibly powerful tool for software engineers, but it also dramatically accelerates the process of replacing many of them. Soon, companies may only need a small handful of highly skilled engineers who know how to effectively leverage tools like this. Another round of layoffs incoming...
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=SVCBA-pBgt0
Has anyone here used Google's Antigravity IDE yet?
I recently tested it out for a web stack project—the interface is very VS Code-like, and the AI (Gemini 3) squashed some long-standing bugs for me and even helped refactor a dormant project back to life. The whole multi-agent setup (where you can spawn coding, review, and refactor agents) is wild for streamlining bigger repos.
Curious:
- Do you find it just a polished VS Code clone with better AI, or does it offer something truly unique?
- Anyone pushed the agentic features in real-world workflows?
- Have you tried Chrome integration or in-IDE API testing?
- How does it stack up to Cursor and other AI IDEs?
Would love actual dev feedback—especially from those who've tried it on mid-to-large codebases.
Copy cat of cursor???