Original title: Kimi K3: Open Frontier Intelligence
Article
Moonshot introduced Kimi K3 as a 2.8T-parameter, 1-million-token, multimodal model and positioned it as the first open 3T-class model aimed at coding, knowledge work, and long-horizon agentic tasks. The release claims it was built with Kimi Delta Attention and Attention Residuals plus Stable LatentMoE, with 16 of 896 experts active, Per-Head Muon, and other training changes said to deliver around 2.5x better scaling efficiency than Kimi K2. The company showcased long-horizon engineering demos, including kernel optimization, autonomous GPU compiler construction with MiniTriton, game-development workflows that iterate from screenshots, chip-design experiments on a custom architecture, and research pipelines that synthesized literature, generated code, and produced visual analytics. It also announced new product features such as Widgets and Dashboard for persistent interactive workflows in Kimi Work, and stated availability through web, desktop apps, terminal tool use, and API pricing tiers with high cache-hit efficiency via Mooncake inference. It emphasized max reasoning as the default setting at launch, with low- and high-effort modes deferred to later updates, and promised a technical report and full weight release on July 27, 2026. Evaluation details were extensive but heterogeneous, using different harnesses across coding, productivity, and multimodal suites, with benchmark conditions and caveats disclosed by benchmark family. The release repeatedly framed Kimi K3 as near the top of frontier performance but still behind Claude Fable 5 and GPT 5.6 Sol, while also noting known limits. It acknowledged sensitivity to incomplete thinking-context handling, strong proactiveness, and comparatively high inference cost, and it reported an explicit path toward stable deployment,
Discussion in the thread is strongly split between enthusiasm and skepticism. Many commenters report impressive demos, especially game creation, web or video generation, and agentic coding speed, and several claim benchmark positioning around Fable and GPT 5.6 Sol while outperforming Opus-grade peers in specific suites. Others are more cautious, questioning reproducibility, tool-calling behavior, speed, timeout risk, fixed parameter settings, and the practical value versus earlier Claude/GPT models. Cost is a major divider: some view prices as justified for frontier-level capability, while others call it too expensive when compared with GPT 5.6 Sol on effective reasoning-token efficiency and real latency. Several participants focus on the “open” claim, noting fluctuating language around openness, delayed weight release, and uncertainty around active parameters or true release status, with repeated concerns about model-weights availability on Hugging Face. Operational friction is also heavily discussed, including login/phone-number barriers, lack of customization in the web UI, and questions about account/subscription choices and API access details. A separate thread warns about governance and security, including customer content potentially used for model improvement and limited guardrails compared with Western providers. Broader geopolitical and market implications are debated, with some seeing a strategic shift toward cheaper Chinese competition and a possible challenge to incumbent provider moats, while others treat this as hype plus benchmark-curve inflation. A few users also note benchmark-specific caveats, reporting both very positive coding experiments and failing prompts, inconsistent instruction adherence, and limited clarity on official public benchmarks andיפ