Kimi AI - Now with K2

Kimi AI - Now with K2

Your AI assistant for everyday use

5.0
•1 review•

398 followers

- Real-time web search across 100+ websites - Analyze up to 50 files (PDFs, Docs, PPTs, Images) with ease - AI slides & websites maker - State of the art coding capabilities - Enhanced image understanding beyond basic text extraction
This is the 8th launch from Kimi AI - Now with K2. View more

Kimi K2.5

Launching today
Native multimodal model with self-directed agent swarms
Kimi K2.5 is Kimi's most intelligent model to date, achieving open-source SoTA performance in Agent, code, visual understanding, and a range of general intelligent tasks. It is also Kimi's most versatile model to date, featuring a native multimodal architecture that supports both visual and text input, thinking and non-thinking modes, and dialogue and Agent tasks.
Kimi K2.5 gallery image
Kimi K2.5 gallery image
Kimi K2.5 gallery image
Kimi K2.5 gallery image
Kimi K2.5 gallery image
Kimi K2.5 gallery image
Kimi K2.5 gallery image
Kimi K2.5 gallery image
Kimi K2.5 gallery image
Kimi K2.5 gallery image
Free
Launch Team
Wispr Flow: Dictation That Works Everywhere
Wispr Flow: Dictation That Works Everywhere
Stop typing. Start speaking. 4x faster.
Promoted

What do you think? …

Zac Zuo

Hi everyone!

Multi-agent architectures are evolving, and Kimi K2.5 executes the "Swarm" concept at a level of scale and native integration we haven't seen before.

Instead of just making a single model think longer (scaling up), they are scaling out.

K2.5 introduces the "Agent Swarm" paradigm. For complex tasks, it autonomously spawns up to 100 sub-agents to execute workflows in parallel, reducing execution time by up to 4.5x.

The Native Multimodality also looks practical, especially the ability to generate code directly from screen recordings (Video-to-Code), rather than just static images.

Kimi also released Kimi Code, which integrates these agentic capabilities directly into the terminal and IDEs like @VS Code, @Cursor, @JetBrains and @Zed.

Impressive to see this level of capability—especially the "Swarm" orchestration—being open-sourced!