OpenAI announced the launch of a plugins system for Codex, enabling seamless native integration with mainstream tools such as Slack, Figma, Notion, Gmail, and Google Drive out of the box. This marks a crucial step in Codex’s transformation from an “AI code generation tool” to a “workflow coordinator.”
How plugins work
According to official explanations, Codex plugins bundle “applications and skills,” allowing Codex to perform tasks directly within these tools’ environments after certification. For example, with the Google Drive plugin, Codex can execute multi-step integrated workflows across Drive, Docs, Sheets, and Slides within a single work cycle, rather than just generating code for users to copy manually.
Plugins can be used in the Codex App, Codex CLI, and IDE extensions. OpenAI has also opened the platform for developers to create their own plugins and share them within their teams.
From coding to understanding context: the missing link in AI development
This update highlights a long-standing blind spot in AI programming tools: in real software development, 80% of the work involves understanding context—reading Slack discussions, reviewing Figma designs, organizing Notion documents—rather than writing code itself. When Codex can only see code, it is ultimately just a smart autocomplete tool; when it can read functional requirement discussions in Slack and design specifications in Figma, it truly understands a task.
Differences with Claude Skills and MCP
The community immediately compared Codex plugins with Anthropic’s Claude Skills and MCP (Model Context Protocol). The biggest difference lies in the approach: Anthropic’s MCP is an open standard with thousands of community-contributed integrations; OpenAI’s Codex plugins are a closed ecosystem but focus on a curated set of “out-of-the-box” tools, pre-integrated with the most common work scenarios like Slack and Figma. Both strategies differ, but they share the same goal: to seamlessly embed AI agents into existing workflows rather than creating standalone bypass tools.
OpenAI’s ecosystem ambitions
Viewed in a broader context, this launch’s significance becomes clearer. The ChatGPT plugin store was a large but seldom-used directory; this time, Codex has selected a few high-frequency tools for direct integration, serving as a refined version of the previous attempt. Coupled with OpenAI’s ongoing acquisitions through 2026, analysts believe OpenAI is building a comprehensive development ecosystem centered around AI agents—where models are core, but tool integration is the moat.
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