Google raises Antigravity weekly quotas 3x after launch complaints
Google raised Antigravity weekly quotas by 3x after earlier launch-limit complaints and creator reports of credit anxiety. Builders posting after the change say Gemini 3.5 Flash feels faster and more usable again, even as frustration over the rollout remains.

TL;DR
- Google said it had already 3xed Antigravity rate limits across all tiers on May 21, then 3xed weekly quotas again on May 22 and reset users' weekly allotments.
- The increase followed visible user complaints about new caps, with bennash saying Google had moved Ultra to usage and credits and describing the result as token and credit anxiety.
- Even while calling the rollout rough, bennash's early reaction said Gemini 3.5 Flash looked strong for code, and his follow-up after the quota change said the model felt smarter, faster, and usable enough for "bigger leaps."
- The product backlash did not disappear with the quota bump, because bennash said Google had not addressed the backlash and also threatened to cancel his Ultra plan if the apps were not fixed.
Google's fix came fast and in public. You can read the first rate-limit bump, then the weekly-quota bump a day later, and the user thread that pushed hardest on the issue also contains a separate creative bright spot: Flow Omni's new Avatar feature, which bennash said was fast but still consumed credits.
Limits reset
The sequence matters. Google first raised Antigravity rate limits across paid tiers on May 21, then raised weekly quotas on May 22 and said it had refreshed everyone's weekly counters.
That second post framed the change as a way to keep builders in flow with Gemini. The wording also implied the first fix was not enough.
Backlash did not vanish
User complaints were concrete:
- Usage caps landed hard enough that bennash said credit anxiety replaced normal use.
- Subscription value became a flashpoint when he said Ultra was now capped and credit based.
- Missing or degraded tools were part of the anger, with a demand to "give me my IDE back" and a report of repaint issues on macOS Tahoe.
- The mood around the launch stayed sour even after the patch, as bennash wrote that Google still had not publicly addressed the backlash.
Gemini 3.5 Flash restored some confidence
The interesting split in the evidence is that the launch complaints and model feedback moved in opposite directions. Bennash's first coding take called the rollout horrible but still said Gemini 3.5 Flash was impressive for code.
After the quota increase, the same user's tone shifted further. His follow-up said Flash was smarter and much faster than earlier Gemini models, while a reply to OfficialLoganK said the new results were rebuilding confidence.
One concrete usage clue sits in the attached demo post, where bennash pairs that positive reaction with a short generated video and the line, "I know what I'm getting mom for Xmas."
Flow Avatar still burns credits
The same complaint thread included one feature-level positive. In the thread context attached to bennash's post, he said Flow Omni's new Avatar feature was fast, but it cost credits.