One conversation. Multiple agents. Parallel work.
Right now your AI assistant has one pair of hands. With Team Agent, you say “build a team” and it spawns teammates that work in parallel — no config files, no new UI.
Any roles, all at once.
Claude leads, Codex implements. Use whatever subscriptions you have.
Close the terminal, come back tomorrow. Same context.
Why a team, not a single agent
You split work across windows by module; each runs alone and you are the one stitching it together.
One feature direction maps to a single leader window — it decides how to split modules, what runs first, and how it all integrates.
“You step back from stitcher to commander.
Multiple AIs can only be used one after another; their strengths never combine.
Divide by strength — the strong one develops, weaker ones run tests, the multimodal one reviews pages, the computer-using one does UI testing.
“A team’s ceiling is no longer the ceiling of its single strongest member.
Things generated separately don’t share a consistent style.
The member who draws and the one who codes are on the same team, so what gets filled in matches in style.
“You get a coherent finished piece, not a box of parts.
A single quota runs dry by month-end — pay more or downgrade.
Pull the quotas of several subscriptions / APIs into one team.
“For the first time, every resource you pay for is working for you at once.
A single agent tosses technical decisions back to you.
The architect sets the approach, the builder lands it, the reviewer vets it — they settle it among themselves.
“You return to the product manager’s seat, no longer dragged into technical details.
You polish a prompt in another window, then copy it over to the agent doing the work.
The leader is the optimizer itself — say what you want casually, and it understands, breaks it down, fills the gaps, and distributes.
“You speak plainly; the team receives a good prompt.
Manually nagging it along: run tests → see failures → fix → run again.
With a tester on the team, feedback keeps coming, pushing iteration until it passes.
“The loop isn’t driven by you writing prompts — it turns on its own because someone on the team is there to pick holes.
No config files, no new interface. Install it, point it at your project, and describe the team you want in plain language.