Google has sealed a $2.4 billion licensing-and-hiring deal with AI coding startup Windsurf. Under this deal, Google will use Windsurf for its code-generation technology, while bringing Windsurf’s CEO Varun Mohan, co-founder Douglas Chen, and several top engineers into Google’s DeepMind division.
Google said the new hires will focus on AI agentic coding initiatives, which are a part of Gemini AI projects. “We’re excited to welcome some top AI coding talent from Windsurf’s team to Google DeepMind to advance our work in agentic coding,” Google spokesperson Chris Pappas said in an email to TechCrunch.
This deal follows OpenAI’s failed $3 billion bid to acqui-hire Windsurf, and it also mirrors the recent acqui-hire arms race that the Big Techs are in to snap up AI talent to build AI technologies — Microsoft’s hiring-and-licensing agreement with Inflection AI, and Meta’s talent hunt on OpenAI and Scale AI.
Windsurf’s AI coding technology
Windsurf, formerly known as Codeium, is a fast-growing AI development platform that built an AI-powered code editor and tools from the ground up. Its flagship Windsurf Editor and Cascade agent allow developers to work in a vibe-coding style.
Rather than writing syntax step-by-step, programmers can describe their intent in plain language and let the system generate or modify code. Windsurf’s AI agents can automatically refactor code, generate documentation and test suites, and even handle complex multi-step tasks.
The Cascade agent, per the company’s website, is marketed as an IDE assistant that “codes, fixes and thinks 10 steps ahead.” Being a deeply integrated AI IDE assistant, it offers features like autocomplete and full-function generation, real-time debugging, and project analysis.
Windsurf AI was built and designed with AI at its core, unlike other similar tools like GitHub Copilot which retrofits AI into an existing editor.
Gemini’s role in Google AI Ecosystem and how Windsurf enhances it
Gemini, a competitor to OpenAI’s ChatGPT, is a part of Google’s cutting-edge family of large AI models and is central to Google’s AI roadmap.
With Windsurf’s experts now joining Google and its coding technology being integrated into DeepMind, we expect to see an enhancement of Gemini’s coding prowess and capabilities. According to Google, Gemini 2.5 already “excels at creating agentic code applications,” as it outperforms its predecessor significantly on code benchmarks. As such, Windsurf can provide the development of AI agents that think in steps and maintain long-term code context.
Windsurf tech also emphasizes natural language workflows, as it allows developers to describe project goals in plain English language in assurance that the system figures out the code.
In short, the combination of Google DeepMind and Windsurf’s AI coding technology could lead to a breakthrough where AI-powered developers can write, test and understand code more efficiently and without the supervision of human developers and engineers.