Google’s experimental AI coding platform, Google Antigravity, may have quietly received a major backend upgrade. Multiple users are now claiming that Gemini 3.2 Flash appears to be live inside Antigravity, even though Google hasn’t officially announced the model yet.

The discussion started after developers noticed dramatic improvements in coding speed, reasoning quality, and multimodal understanding while using the existing “Gemini 3 Flash” option inside Antigravity.

Users Say Antigravity Suddenly Feels Faster and Smarter

A new Reddit thread on the GeminiAI subreddit sparked speculation that Google may already be testing Gemini 3.2 Flash internally through Antigravity.

According to users, the current Flash model feels:

  • Much faster than before
  • Better at long coding tasks
  • More accurate with image understanding
  • Smarter in agentic workflows
  • More capable in JavaScript and app generation

One Reddit user claimed the model generated over 1,500 lines of JavaScript that “just worked perfectly,” while others noticed stronger reasoning and significantly lower latency.

While there’s still no official confirmation from Google, the timing aligns with recent upgrades to the Gemini 3 ecosystem and Antigravity’s rapid evolution as Google’s AI-first development platform.

What Is Google Antigravity?

Google Antigravity is Google’s agentic AI coding environment built around Gemini models and autonomous AI workflows.

The platform was introduced alongside Gemini 3 and focuses heavily on:

  • AI-powered coding agents
  • Autonomous task execution
  • Browser-integrated workflows
  • Multi-agent orchestration
  • Rapid app development

Google describes Antigravity as an “agent-first” development platform designed to let developers delegate complex coding tasks to AI agents.

The IDE already supports several advanced models including Gemini 3 Pro and Gemini 3 Flash.

Why Gemini 3.2 Flash Could Be a Big Deal

Google has been aggressively expanding the Gemini 3 family in recent months.

The company recently introduced Gemini 3 Flash as a faster and cheaper frontier AI model optimized for:

  • Coding
  • Agentic workflows
  • Multimodal reasoning
  • Real-time interactions
  • High-frequency development tasks

Google says Gemini 3 Flash delivers “Pro-grade reasoning with Flash-level latency.”

If Gemini 3.2 Flash is indeed rolling out behind the scenes, developers could see:

  • Better coding accuracy
  • Faster response times
  • Improved context handling
  • Stronger reasoning
  • More reliable autonomous agents

That would make Antigravity even more competitive against tools like Cursor, GitHub Copilot, and Claude-powered coding platforms.

Google Has Quietly Tested Models Before

This wouldn’t be the first time Google quietly tested or swapped AI models before a public launch.

Several Antigravity users previously noticed inconsistent model naming and backend behavior changes during earlier Gemini upgrades.

Because Antigravity is still in preview, Google may be experimenting with newer Gemini variants internally before making an official announcement at a future event.

Gemini 3.2 Flash Could Arrive Soon

Speculation around Gemini 3.2 Flash has been building for weeks across Reddit and AI communities.

With Google continuing to push deeper into AI coding agents and autonomous workflows, a more powerful Flash model would fit perfectly into the company’s broader AI roadmap.

For now, Google hasn’t officially confirmed the existence of Gemini 3.2 Flash. But if the recent Antigravity performance jump is real, developers may already be getting an early taste of Google’s next major AI model upgrade.

Interested in reading more about Google Gemini news. Read our full Google Gemini coverage by clicking here.

Catch our full Google I/O 2026 coverage with interesting leaks, rumors and announcements by clicking here.

Please follow us on our Facebook page and X account for all latest and breaking Google, Android and Nokia related news.

Add NPowerUser (https://nokiapoweruser.com) as a preferred source on Google News
Add NPowerUser as a preferred source on Google News