The latest discussion around Claude Code, Codex, and Antigravity is not about which model is “best” in isolation. It is about which operating model fits your engineering workflow: interactive control, delegated execution, or agent-first orchestration.
This post includes a recreated infographic built from the shared LinkedIn analysis and official product documentation.

Why this comparison matters
We are moving from code completion to task execution. That shift changes the main decision from “which assistant writes code fastest” to “which control plane helps my team ship safely and consistently”.
Operating model breakdown
| Tool | Primary mode | Best fit | Main trade-off |
|---|---|---|---|
| Claude Code | Interactive control | Engineers who want close supervision inside existing repo workflows. | Higher operator involvement per task. |
| Codex | Delegated execution | Teams that batch and hand off larger tasks for asynchronous completion. | Needs strong review gates after execution. |
| Antigravity | Agent-first orchestration | Teams managing multiple agents across editor, terminal, and browser surfaces. | Requires mature orchestration and governance habits. |
Evidence from official docs
- Claude Code docs emphasise context-window management and starting fresh sessions when conversation quality degrades.
- Codex AGENTS.md docs describe instruction-chain loading at session start, reinforcing a startup-configuration mindset.
- Google Antigravity launch materials position the product as agent-first, with manager and editor surfaces for asynchronous orchestration.
Decision framework for teams
| Question | If answer is yes | Likely model preference |
|---|---|---|
| Do we need tight, continuous engineer oversight on live code edits? | Keep the engineer deeply in loop. | Interactive control. |
| Do we prefer to queue work and review completed outputs in batches? | Optimise for delegation throughput. | Delegated execution. |
| Are we building a multi-agent workflow across multiple surfaces? | Optimise for orchestration and coordination. | Agent-first orchestration. |
| Is failure recovery/rollback policy more important than raw generation speed? | Prioritise governance over novelty. | Any model, but with strong control-plane tooling. |
Practical adoption pattern
- Start with one operating model per team, not all three at once.
- Define review and rollback protocol before increasing delegation depth.
- Track context drift and failed handoffs as first-class engineering metrics.
- Scale agent autonomy only where verification can remain cheap and reliable.
Bottom line: this is less a model race and more an execution-design choice. Teams that choose the right operating model for their delivery system will outperform teams that choose by hype alone.
Sources: LinkedIn post by Brij kishore Pandey, Anthropic Claude Code best practices, OpenAI Codex AGENTS.md guide, and Google Antigravity launch blog.




