Introducing Agents 3.0: The only agents with full terminal capabilities.

Learn More.

Warp Wrapped: 2025 in Review

Hong Yi Chen

Company

Warp Wrapped: 2025 in Review

2025 was the year Warp stopped being “just a terminal” and became an Agentic Development Environment (ADE): a platform where the default unit of work shifted from ‘open file, type code’ or ‘open terminal, type command’ to write a ‘prompt, steer agents, and ship with confidence’.

The numbers tell part of the story. Warp’s agents edited 3.2 billion lines of code, indexed and synced 120,000+ codebases for richer context, and processed tens of trillions of LLM tokens. Internally, we merged 10,000+ PRs and closed 940 GitHub issues.

It was a strong year beyond the metrics too, with a TIME Best Inventions of 2025 mention, a Newsweek AI Impact Award, and coverage from TechCrunch on the terminal becoming a surprising new home for AI coding tools.

But the real story is the shift in what matters. It’s no longer “can an agent write code?” It’s “can you understand, control, and review what it produces quickly enough to ship?” That question shaped everything we built this year, from a review-first coding experience to Full Terminal Use to tighter human-in-the-loop collaboration.

We also delivered some of our most requested features: Windows support, full UI zoom, BYOK, ligatures, and more. These are the fundamentals that make Warp feel fast, polished, and dependable in daily work.

Whether you use Warp as a terminal, a coding tool, or your team’s agent hub, the goal stays the same: help you build faster, with better collaboration and more control.

Let’s dive into how we did it in 2025.

Bringing Warp to Windows

In February, Warp officially launched on Windows, bringing Warp’s modern terminal (and AI-native workflows) to more developers than ever. This made Warp available with PowerShell, WSL, and Git Bash, plus x64 and ARM64 support. Try it here.

Windows support has been one of the top asks from our community, and we’re excited to join the Windows developer ecosystem. Warp delivers the same core experience on Windows as it does on macOS and Linux: it’s written entirely in Rust, rendered directly on the GPU for speed, and works great out of the box with all the features that make Warp more than just a terminal.

Warp 2.0 – making shipping software agentic

In June, we launched Warp 2.0, the first Agentic Development Environment, built for the shift toward agentic workflows. Warp 2.0 brings four capabilities into one workflow-native app: Code, Agents, Terminal, and Drive. It also makes agent management and multithreading first-class primitives, so you can run multiple tasks in parallel and step in only when needed.

Post-launch, it was incredible to see what teams built with Warp: real features shipped, messy refactors tackled, and day-to-day workflows shifting from one-off commands to parallel, agent-driven work. Developers used Warp to produce hundreds of millions of lines of code weekly, with 96%+ acceptance of agent-suggested diffs.

Production-ready agents, with devs in control

Warp Code

In September, we launched Warp Code. As previously noted, we believe the problem is less about “can the agent write code?” and more “can I quickly understand, control, and review the code the agent writes?”

Warp Code introduced:

  • A dedicated code review experience for steering agent-generated diffs
  • A lightweight native file editor (tabbed viewing, file tree, find-and-replace)
  • Projects + WARP.md, plus agent profiles and slash commands to standardize behavior across teams.

We even embraced cowboys: we put our CEO on a horse and shipped the tools to wrangle bugs and keep agents under control, even when you’re building in Code Country.

Agents 3.0

And lastly, in November, Agents got a major capability expansion focused on two goals: 1. run agents in more environments, and 2. tighten the loop for human steering.

Highlights included:

  • Full Terminal Use, so agents can interact with the terminal the way you do (including REPLs, debuggers, and full-screen apps)
  • /plan for spec-driven development and alignment before execution
  • Interactive code review, bringing the “agent as teammate” workflow into a review loop that feels familiar, fast, and correct-by-construction
  • Slack, Linear, and GitHub Actions integrations that let you run agents from the tools you already use, track progress, and jump in via live session sharing.

Quality, benchmarks, and recognition

We paired scale with quality. Aside from ranking #1 on our highly scientific internal “order coffee from the terminal” benchmark, Warp’s coding agent ranked at the top of major benchmarks:

  • 61.2% on Terminal-Bench
  • 75.6% on SWE-bench Verified

Learn more about our methodology, and what powered these results.

By popular demand

One of the most satisfying themes of 2025 was closing the loop on long-running requests from power users, and shipping the “you asked, we listened” features that have been on the list for years.

A standout example was full UI zoom. We published a deep dive into why it took so long (the realities of a custom Rust UI framework), and what finally unlocked it.

Other highly requested features we shipped:

  • BYOK (Bring Your Own Key): Use your own OpenAI, Anthropic, or Google API keys inside Warp’s agent harness.
  • Ligatures: We patched our default Hack font to include ligatures. Just toggle ligatures on and they work out of the box, no font downloads required.
  • Kitty image protocol: view images and videos directly inside Warp, standalone or alongside tools like Yazi, Chafa, or mpv.

Core experience updates

  • Pricing and billing updates. We simplified pricing around the Build plan and introduced usage-based credit reloads, with BYOK as an option. We also made AI spend easier to understand with clearer terminology, inline usage summaries, and improved billing insights.
  • MCP Gallery and one-click setup. We launched the MCP Gallery: one-click installs from Warp’s curated servers, MCPs shared by your teammates, or any JSON snippet you want to add.
  • More models, more choice. We broadened model support significantly. In January, the model picker was a short list. Now it feels almost quaint. By year-end, Warp supported 20+ state-of-the-art models across providers.

Keep the feedback coming on our GitHub Issues and in our Community Slack, and download the Preview build to try what’s next.

Meeting developers where they build

We care a lot about meeting developers where real work happens: hackathon late nights, meetup hallway chats, demo-night skepticism, and the kinds of opinions you don’t get from a survey.

Sometimes that’s online, sometimes it’s on the road - showing up in new cities, new rooms, and the occasional billboard - because that’s where we keep hearing the feedback that changes what we build next.

That’s why in 2025 we sponsored, partnered with, and attended 44 events, spanning major hackathons, local dev meetups, hacker houses, and demo nights.

Side quests

Not everything fit neatly into a release note, so we embraced a few side quests:

Warp University

We expanded Warp University with lessons showing how developers use Warp in real projects, from automating code reviews and deployments to building MCP servers and integrating Warp into production pipelines.

In 2025, we shipped 51 bite-sized modules, and the curriculum has been watched 100,000+ times.

Looking ahead to 2026

2025 made one thing clear: the agentic workflow is real, and it’s accelerating.

Thank you for building with us, and thank you for pushing us. In 2026, we’ll keep moving Warp toward a tighter “prompt → production” loop, with more control, better context, stronger collaboration, and more ways to deploy agents in the tools your team already uses.

If you want to join the adventure, we’re hiring.

Happy New Year from the Warp team!

Download Warp

Related

One month as the Agentic Development Environment: 2 million agents daily and 15x revenue growth

One month as the Agentic Development Environment: 2 million agents daily and 15x revenue growth

By Warp Team

Trusted by hundreds of thousands of professional developers

Download Warp to get started

Download for Mac
.deb

Debian, Ubuntu

.rpm

Red Hat, Fedora, SUSE

Download for Windows

For Windows 11/10 x64

Download for Windows

For Windows 11/10 ARM64

On a mobile device? Send Warp to your work station.