Antigravity 2.0 is awful, Here's how to get the previous version

I did keep everything from my claude extension, i’ve since created an obsidian vault workflow MD into a PM tool for Kanban. Essentially makes a Model agnostic version of “Symphony” from openAI.

i use MCP’s for those things cause i just dont trust Google at this point not to try to build garden walls everywhere in their ecosystem. It’s Google’s product so i cant blame them but at this point it’s clear an MCP and model agnostic’s is the only long term solution

Haha same. psuedo vibe coder. I have a minor in engineering sciences. but my main was a BBA. I know enough to read and keep up at a comprehensive lvl even in depth workflows, traces, and testing but if I had to write it myself the furthest i’d get is a complie error because i forgot a semi colon in "hello world " :sob:

The great thing is that my Debian 13 has not allowed me to update to antigravity 2.0 somehow despite I was wanting to update and I am thankful for it. Gemini Flash 3.5 is total loss in my opinion, I loved older Gemini Flash because it feel like limitless and was a good one also. Google is doing updates no one asked for.

The 2.0 update released by the Antigravity team is a complete failure. The ideal solution is to simply abandon this useless product.

That would be correct if we could have chosen to upgrade or download an additional Antigravity 2.0 besides an existing one :slight_smile: That’s not about paying attention when there’s no other choice :wink:

KR

Franky, i like the update, i dont have all that crappy vscode IDE stuff to deal with. Thats just me though.

You can download the IDE separately, but its also included in 2, at the top left.
If downloading separately, get it from the real antigravity site, there is a fake site out there that comes up when you search.

seriously, what a joke.

cant use AG 2.0 IDE unless you opt in for telemetry/usage tracking…

srsly?

That’s not correct though, just uncheck it.

how to download mac apple silicon older version ? v1.23.2?

I agree @bpappin and I think it is still good for daily tasks, though. I’ve found that the Agent window uses less quota than the IDE integration, and the CLI uses even fewer tokens compared to both.

They clearly don’t want users to be tied to their own IDE. I’ve always used JetBrains. Previously, I had to rely on Copilot in VS Code for agentic workflows, then started to use AntiGravity as well, but now that Gemini has a standalone agent, it’s much easier for me to work with agents while staying in JetBrains.

(Not to mention that the Gemini and Copilot plugins for JetBrains are pretty poor.)

I initially found the agent split update difficult to adapt to, but I’m getting used to it now. Also, the Flash and Pro models are quite good at the moment, and the quotas have improved as well.

On the other hand, Opus completely exhausted its quota on a single task. All I asked it to do was read five files and update one function in a single file, and the quota was gone within five minutes, to literally 0.