What People Are Actually Building With Codex
The most interesting Codex projects are not generic demos. They are personal tools, games, visual experiments, and narrow products with a reason to exist.
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What people are building with Codex, where agent workflows are improving, and what still needs a human hand.
RSS feedThe most interesting Codex projects are not generic demos. They are personal tools, games, visual experiments, and narrow products with a reason to exist.
Read field noteA small web game shows a useful way to move from code-shaped placeholder art to editable Blender assets without stopping development.
Read field noteCodex now lives inside the ChatGPT desktop app, bringing repository work, review, Computer Use, and plugins into one surface.
Read field noteSkills, MCP servers, apps, and plugins solve different problems. The July Codex updates make the boundaries between them easier to use.
Read field noteNew usage research suggests the important change is not how often people talk to an agent, but how much complete work they are willing to entrust to it.
Read field noteThe r185 release adds WebXR support, clustered lighting, and a collection of smaller changes that make WebGPU projects easier to take seriously.
Read field noteThe Secure MCP Tunnel offers a practical pattern for connecting private tools while keeping the server behind existing network controls.
Read field noteRemote coding gets more useful when the phone is treated as a place to steer, approve, and review work already running on a trusted host.
Read field noteAgents can make the first working version arrive quickly. Shipping still begins where the demo ends.
Read field noteRepository instructions work best when they help an agent find its footing, not when they try to predict every possible mistake.
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