I Built a VS Code Extension for Google's Antigravity CLI (Because I Refuse to Leave My Editor)
There's a pattern I've noticed with every new AI coding tool that comes out: they all want you to switch editors. Or open a new terminal. Or context-switch into some standalone app. I DON'T WANT TO DO THAT My entire dev workflow lives in VS Code. My keybindings, my split panes, my snippets, my extensions — all of it. When Google released the Antigravity CLI ( agy ), an agentic coding assistant, I genuinely liked what it could do. But to use it properly, I had to live in a terminal window, manually managing sessions, typing slash commands from memory, and losing my editor context entirely. So I built a VS Code extension for it instead. What is Antigravity? Google Antigravity is Google's agentic coding CLI — think of it as a Gemini-powered dev assistant that can read your project, run tools, execute terminal commands, and help you build. It's the kind of tool that can handle complex multi-step tasks, not just autocomplete. The CLI is called agy , and it's genuinely capable. The problem was the workflow: terminal-first, session management by hand, and no visual layer over the context you're already in. The Extension: Antigravity for VS Code Install it on the VS Code Marketplace Source on GitHub The core idea is simple: the extension is a UI layer. It never bundles or replaces the agy binary — it shells out to whichever version you have installed locally. Same philosophy as the Claude Code VS Code extension: the editor provides the surface, the CLI does the work. Here's what it actually does: Sessions List The sidebar panel opens to all your saved sessions. You can open an existing one, delete it, or start fresh. New sessions can be launched in sandboxed mode or with permissions bypassed — accessible right from the "New Session" overflow menu, without memorizing CLI flags. Any session with an active turn shows a loading indicator in its row, so you always know what's in flight. Chat Panel (Material 3 Expressive) This is the main surface. Each session runs its own live,