Original title: GLM Coding
Article
GLM announced a three-tier ZCode coding offering centered on GLM-5.2, with Lite, Pro, and high-volume tiers that all include a base usage allowance, plus a desktop-first workflow featuring planning and execution tooling, multi-agent support, and integrations with other Z.ai services. The product emphasizes lightweight to high-volume usage options, support for many coding tools, and compatibility with existing messaging environments, while positioning itself for teams and individuals shipping features quickly. Comments in parallel indicate the release is being read as another commoditized agent-style competitor to existing coding environments, with users comparing it directly to Claude-like and OpenCode-style workflows and noting it is not a CLI-first option by default. Support details are considered vague by several participants because “base usage allowance” terms are not clearly disclosed, and discount schedules with peak/off-peak multipliers are seen as potentially confusing. Practical comparisons emerge around whether native integrations, speed, and reliability differ meaningfully from existing harnesses, with GLM-5.2 judged strong but often slower than Opus. Several participants frame the launch as more UI replication than novel architecture, especially since GLM already works with generic harnesses. Others praise ZCode as a stable, useful coding companion and a polished interface, particularly for non-CLI workflows. Concerns also appear around trust, portability, and migration value versus open ecosystems and already established coding agent tools. The net takeaway is a viable product with clear execution polish but uncertain differentiation beyond bundling and pricing packaging.
Discussion is split between early adopters testing the interface and users skeptical of the strategy. Several comments praise the clean interface and note practical appeal for people who prefer GUI coding assistants, while others criticize it as a near copy of existing clients and favor TUI-first tools like OpenCode. A major theme is openness: many ask why the platform is closed source despite claims of open models, while a smaller group accepts closed deployment in favor of faster integration. Another recurring concern is security and governance, with one camp warning about data exposure and Chinese legal obligations when running a closed remote agent on corporate machines, and another expressing preference for local or open clients to control file and command visibility. Pricing scrutiny is extensive, including requests for direct comparisons to Claude plans, concerns about undisclosed base quotas, stock limitations, and the interpretation of peak/off-peak usage multipliers and free credits. Users also ask for CLI support, multi-provider harness switching, local-model workflows, and Opencode-compatible subscription usage. Some report reliability friction, including frequent API connection reset errors requiring retries. Performance and value claims are mixed: GLM-5.2 is described as capable, but sometimes slower than Claude Opus. Overall sentiment is that the tool is promising in usability but faces trust, transparency, and differentiation questions.