If only fair comparisons would not be so costly, in both time and money.
For example, I have a ChatGPT and a Gemini subscription, and thus could somewhat quickly check out their products, and I have looked at a lot of the various Google AI dev ventures, but I have not yet found the energy/will to get more into Gemini CLI specifically. Antigravity with Gemini 3 pro did some really wonky stuff when I tried it.
I also have a Windsurf subscription, which allows me to look at any frontier model for coding (well, most of the time, unless there's some sort of company beef going). This I have often used to check out Anthropic models, with much less success than Codex with > GPT-5.1 – but of course, that's without using Clode Caude (which I subscribed to for a month, idk, 6 months ago, and seemed fine back then but not mind blowingly so).
Idk! Codex (mostly using the vscode extension) works really well for me right now, but I would assume this is simply true across the board: Everything has gotten so much better. If I had to put my finger on what feels best about codex right now, specifically: Least amount of oversights and mistakes when working on gnarly backend code, with the amount of steering I am willing to put into it, mostly working off of 3-4 paragraph prompts.
For example, I have a ChatGPT and a Gemini subscription, and thus could somewhat quickly check out their products, and I have looked at a lot of the various Google AI dev ventures, but I have not yet found the energy/will to get more into Gemini CLI specifically. Antigravity with Gemini 3 pro did some really wonky stuff when I tried it.
I also have a Windsurf subscription, which allows me to look at any frontier model for coding (well, most of the time, unless there's some sort of company beef going). This I have often used to check out Anthropic models, with much less success than Codex with > GPT-5.1 – but of course, that's without using Clode Caude (which I subscribed to for a month, idk, 6 months ago, and seemed fine back then but not mind blowingly so).
Idk! Codex (mostly using the vscode extension) works really well for me right now, but I would assume this is simply true across the board: Everything has gotten so much better. If I had to put my finger on what feels best about codex right now, specifically: Least amount of oversights and mistakes when working on gnarly backend code, with the amount of steering I am willing to put into it, mostly working off of 3-4 paragraph prompts.