Most users who downloaded Antigravity likely ran one agent to scaffold an app, witnessed Gemini 3's capabilities, and immediately envisioned a future where they wouldn't have to write code. This initial reaction is completely understandable.
However, Antigravity is built upon a robust stack of capabilities, many of which are unrelated to writing functions. It features a browser agent that can perceive and navigate your screen, a memory system that persists across sessions, and an agent framework capable of juggling multiple tasks simultaneously. Recognizing these underlying strengths reveals use cases far more diverse than just your next pull request.
1. Use It as a Research Assistant
Anyone who has conducted competitive research properly understands the tedious routine: opening numerous tabs, losing track of pricing details, jotting down unintelligible notes, and ultimately producing a half-finished analysis.
Antigravity's browser agent handles this entire process autonomously. You simply describe your objective—competitors' announcements, pricing pages, recent product updates—and it navigates the web independently, compiling a structured "Artifact" that you can readily use.
The browser integration here is more profound than it sounds. Built around Chrome, the agent interprets pages as a human would: scrolling, clicking, and reading rendered content instead of merely parsing raw HTML. The result is coherent, commentable output. For professionals engaged in recurring market research, this feature alone justifies its adoption.
Upon request, the agent can also organize its findings by category, source, or recency. Instead of a dense block of text, you receive structured, referenceable information. This type of organized output typically requires drafting a research brief and then waiting for someone else to execute it.
2. Build a Knowledge Base That Doesn't Evaporate
One of Antigravity's core design principles is to treat learning as a persistent feature, rather than a session-by-session reset. The platform enables agents to save context, patterns, and reference material to a shared knowledge base that carries across sessions and improves with continued use.
Notably, this system is agnostic to the type of information you feed it, be it code snippets or company documentation. You can load it with style guides, research notes, internal standard operating procedures (SOPs), or even create flashcards using Coursebox for any material you frequently need to reference. For anyone who repeatedly pastes the same context into new tools, this feature directly addresses that pain point.
It represents structured, purposeful memory that is not wiped upon closing the window. Over time, agents operating within this knowledge base become more accurate and context-aware, as they draw upon a history of your work rather than starting afresh with each new session.
3. Generate UI Walk
(Original content truncated here)