5 Things I Bet You Didn't Know About Antigravity

AILABS-393 5nxnNRYQIoI Watch on YouTube Published November 28, 2025
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726 words Language: en Auto-generated

Along with the release of Gemini 3, Google also dropped anti-gravity. Initially, I thought it was just another VS Code fork, but we saw that Google shipped a lot of other interesting features as well. The new Nano Banana Pro is one of them, and it's not only an anti-gravity, but Google Stitch as well. It's free for now across all tiers as it's a preview version, but the rate limits exhaust pretty fast. It does have potential, though. So, let's dive into five anti-gravity features you need to know. With the nano banana integration, you can ask the model to generate the UI style you want your website to follow. I asked Anti-Gravity to generate three vintage themed website designs for a photography portfolio, each with its own unique style. I used the second one, and it created the website with this style. It was a pretty minimal website with great fonts, and it used blank placeholder images. The fonts it used matched the editorial aesthetic really well, giving it an overall clean look. The design wasn't exactly the same, but it still looked good enough. The crazy part is you can even ask Nano Banana to generate images for your website, which I did to fill those placeholder images. The agents manager is another interesting feature. You can use the agents view and the editor view side by side with multiple agents working together. The idea behind it is to give manager-like control over tasks. You can have multiple agents working simultaneously within a project and choose between them. Each agent works in the same project unlike others where they operate in isolated work trees. There are workspaces which are essentially separate projects. So you can have multiple projects open at the same time with agents running in each following their own set of tasks. The whole manager runs in the background and there's an inbox where you'll get notifications whenever an agent finishes its work. You can check and update their progress. With agents manager, you can assign different tasks to different agents and have them work on various areas of your website. You can follow along with each agent and watch as it makes changes in real time. When you install anti-gravity for the first time, you'll be prompted to install the anti-gravity browser extension because it also has a browser integration. It's not builtin and it runs on a separate Chrome profile so your agents don't interfere with your actual browser activity. This browser also enables the model to automatically launch and do proper well-grounded research for you. I asked it to look up popular themes for photography websites and after asking if I wanted to allow cookies, it continued working in the browser. It also provided a full recording after completion and it serves as an artifact for the model to understand the process. This brings us to the most interesting feature in anti-gravity. It uses the browser to test the web apps simulating interactions with scrolls, button clicks, and other interactions to detect issues. It takes screenshots and recordings while testing. When I asked it to check my website, it navigated through all the pages and took numerous screenshots to identify where the application was lacking. The testing and fixing took considerable time. Although it didn't fix the padding issues on the sidebar and navbar, by the end, the final website had improved a lot. When you give any prompt to the model to create something in planning mode, it first generates an extensive implementation plan and then waits for you to review it. Once you've refined or reviewed the plan, you can click proceed so that the model can start the implementation. With this comments feature, you can comment on the implementation plan or any other artifacts it creates, and it will incorporate those changes directly into the implementation. Not only that, you can also add comments midway while it's executing, making for a more natural feedback loop than the usual chat other agents have. With a few upgrades and optimization, I could honestly see this as becoming my new daily coding agent. That brings us to the end of this video. If you'd like to support the channel and help us keep making videos like this, you can do so by using the super thanks button below.

Summary

The video explores five key features of Google's new AI tool, Anti-Gravity, highlighting its capabilities in generating website designs, managing multiple agents, browser integration for research and testing, and a structured planning process with real-time feedback.

Key Points

  • Anti-Gravity is a new AI tool from Google, introduced alongside Gemini 3, that enables AI-powered website creation and management.
  • It integrates with Nano Banana to generate website designs and images, allowing users to customize UI styles and fill placeholder content.
  • The Agents Manager feature lets users run multiple agents simultaneously within a single project, enabling collaborative task execution.
  • Anti-Gravity includes a browser extension that allows the model to conduct research, browse the web, and record sessions for context and artifact generation.
  • The tool uses browser-based testing to simulate user interactions, take screenshots, and identify UI issues, improving website functionality.
  • It employs a planning mode where the model first generates an implementation plan, which users can review and comment on before execution.
  • Users can provide real-time feedback during implementation via comments, creating a more natural and iterative development loop.
  • The tool is currently in preview and free across all tiers, though rate limits are restrictive.
  • Despite some limitations, such as not fixing all styling issues, the final output shows significant improvement and potential.

Key Takeaways

  • Use Anti-Gravity to quickly generate and customize website designs with specific themes and styles.
  • Leverage the Agents Manager to assign different tasks to multiple AI agents working in parallel on a single project.
  • Enable the browser extension to allow the AI to research, test, and validate web applications in real-world conditions.
  • Utilize the planning mode and comment feature to refine AI outputs before implementation and provide mid-process feedback.
  • Consider Anti-Gravity as a potential daily coding assistant once it receives further upgrades and optimizations.

Primary Category

AI Tools & Frameworks

Secondary Categories

Programming & Development AI Agents LLMs & Language Models

Topics

Antigravity IDE Google Antigravity Gemini 3 VS Code fork Nano Banana Pro AI coding assistant Agents Manager Browser integration AI-generated UI AI-generated images

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people
organizations
Google Gemini
products
technologies
domain_specific
products technologies

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0.70 (Positive)

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tutorial

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intermediate

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