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Google's Antigravity IDE and Nano Banana Pro ship - agent orchestration meets image generation

Google released Antigravity, an agent-first IDE for multi-agent orchestration, alongside Nano Banana Pro, an image generation model that competes with Midjourney. Both tools integrate with Gemini 3 and target enterprise developers building production AI agents. The real test: whether the orchestration layer solves coordination problems or adds complexity.

Google's Antigravity IDE and Nano Banana Pro ship - agent orchestration meets image generation

Google shipped two enterprise AI tools in late November 2025: Antigravity, an agent-first IDE, and Nano Banana Pro, an image generation model. Both integrate with Gemini 3 and aim at developers building production AI agents that handle both code and media generation.

What Antigravity Does

Antigravity is a multi-window development environment designed for asynchronous agent orchestration. Unlike standard IDEs, it includes an Agent Manager view where developers review implementation plans before agents execute them. It uses Gemini 3 under the hood and supports the Model Context Protocol (MCP) for connecting external tools.

The pitch: manage complex, multi-agent workflows without writing orchestration logic from scratch. Google demonstrated this with a slides generator that coordinates between code generation and image creation agents.

Nano Banana Pro's Angle

Nano Banana Pro (technically Gemini 3 Pro Image model) generates high-fidelity images with text handling and infographics capabilities. It connects to Google Search for real-time data grounding - pulling live stock charts or weather into generated images.

This matters for enterprise use cases where image generation needs to reflect current data, not training set snapshots. Google positions it as Midjourney competition but with enterprise tooling around it.

The Integration Play

Both tools tie into Google's Vertex AI ecosystem and the Agent Development Kit (ADK). The demo workflow: prompt Antigravity to build a slides agent, which calls an MCP server running Nano Banana Pro to generate images stored in Cloud Storage.

Google Cloud Tech's podcast coverage (11K views) shows working demos but no production case studies yet. The Agent Starter Pack repository provides scaffolding to spin up ADK projects.

What to Watch

The architecture assumes developers want Google to manage agent orchestration rather than building on LangChain, Crew AI, or open alternatives. For startups evaluating code generation tools, the question is whether Antigravity's orchestration layer justifies vendor lock-in versus rolling their own on Grok or open models.

Enterprise adoption will depend on whether the "always review" mode actually prevents runaway agents in production or just adds friction. And whether Nano Banana Pro's grounding capabilities deliver accuracy enterprises can trust.

Google hasn't published pricing or SLAs for either tool. Until then, it's a capabilities demo, not a procurement decision.