OpenCode 1.3.4 released

OpenCode 1.3.4 — a local, open‑source AI coding assistant — shipped this week, signalling that AI‑augmented developer workflows are moving mainstream and raising expectations for baseline coding fluency in research teams. (warp2search.net)

v1.3.4’s changelog and release notes list a “prompt slot” feature, an effect‑based refactor of the session processor, TUI plugins support, and explicit compatibility with AI SDK v6 among other core changes. (github.com) Desktop and startup work in v1.3.4 include faster app startup, Azure Artifact Signing for Windows builds, persisted queued followups across project switches, and a number of UI fixes credited to community contributors BYK, vglafirov, and gigamonster256. (github.com) The anomalyco/opencode repository shows 132K stars and a 14.1K fork count on its GitHub release page, reflecting the project’s large open‑source footprint at the time of the release. (github.com) The project website states OpenCode has roughly 120K GitHub stars, ~800 contributors, over 10,000 commits, and claims usage by about 5 million developers per month—figures the project uses to quantify community adoption. (opencode.ai) OpenCode advertises integration with 75+ LLM providers (including GitHub Copilot and ChatGPT Plus/Pro), availability as a terminal CLI, desktop beta, and IDE extensions, and distributable install methods such as Homebrew, npm, bun, and a curl installer. (opencode.ai) The project changelog and release notes also surface features aimed at reproducible team workflows—git‑backed session review modes and initial event‑sourced session syncing—which enable in‑tool review of uncommitted changes and more persistent session state for collaborative debugging. (opencode.ai)

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