The Anti-Antigravity Google's launch of Antigravity 2.0 represents a major shift from a coding assistant to a standalone "agent-first" desktop application, removing core developer tools like file explorers, terminals, and Git control to prioritize high-level task orchestration and "vibe coding." The update, positioned as a successor to Google AI Studio rather than an IDE, targets non-developer users such as enterprises and knowledge workers, but has caused confusion among developers who expected an upgraded development environment. Google recommends engineers "dual-wield" both the original IDE and Antigravity 2.0, though skepticism remains about the long-term support for two parallel products under the same brand. Google’s rollout of Antigravity 2.0 marks a massive paradigm shift in the agentic tool space. Officially launched as a standalone desktop application, Antigravity 2.0 strips away the traditional coding environment to deliver a purely "agent-first" experience powered by the latest Gemini models. It introduces features like dynamic subagents, asynchronous task management, and other stuff. However, by packing these sweeping platform changes under the flagship "2.0" label, Google has inadvertently sparked a wave of confusion across the developers. For power users expecting an upgraded development environment, Antigravity 2.0 takes things in a completely new direction. This is not a traditional coding companion tool. In a deliberate move to transition away from local workspace management, Google has completely omitted fundamental developer primitives. In Antigravity 2.0, you cannot: • Access a file explorer to navigate directories. • Open a native terminal to execute local commands. • Manage extensions to customize your environment. • Utilize Git control for version tracking and branching. Rather than assisting you as you write code, the interface acts as an orchestrator for high-level tasks, prioritizing "vibe coding" and broad knowledge work over engineering. To understand Google’s true intent, it helps to look at Antigravity 2.0 not as a code editor, but as a successor to Google AI Studio. Google AI Studio has long served as a flexible prototyping environment where developers and non-developers alike can experiment with prompts, tweak model parameters, and test system instructions without being tethered to a local codebase. Antigravity 2.0 takes that exact philosophy and wraps it in a consumer-facing desktop app. By decoupling the agent from a specific repository and organizing work into multi-folder "projects," Google is targeting a non-developer audience—enterprises, product managers, and knowledge workers—who want to orchestrate automated workflows via natural language without the daunting complexity of an IDE. Google’s official recommendation for engineers is to "dual-wield" both applications side-by-side, using the IDE for development and 2.0 for background automation. But this raises a glaring question: Who actually codes with two IDE applications open at the same time? Swapping windows between two heavily branded, similarly named apps just to separate your terminal from your agent manager is a clunky user experience. Furthermore, skepticism is brewing over whether Google will keep its promise to support both. Google has already announced that an upcoming release will remove the Agent Manager surface from the Antigravity IDE to make it a purely developer-focused editor. History shows that maintaining two parallel products under the same brand name is rarely a permanent strategy. For a community that adopted the original Antigravity for its seamless, all-in-one agentic integration, splitting the ecosystem feels less like a step forward and more like a platform paradox. The paradox isn't clever naming — it's the fundamental contradiction between what was promised a better Antigravity and what was actually delivered a different kind of product wearing the same name . Source: Google Antigravity Blog – Introducing Google Antigravity 2.0