July 16, 2026

Same bot, new drop, old drama

Kimi K3 Is Live

Kimi’s new AI just dropped, and the crowd’s already yelling “seen it before”

TLDR: Kimi launched K3, a more powerful AI model with bigger memory and tier-based access, but users may see higher usage or hit access limits when switching. The community’s loudest reaction wasn’t hype — it was a blunt repost callout, turning the launch into a tiny drama fest.

Kimi has officially rolled out K3, its new top-tier artificial intelligence model, promising better coding help, bigger memory for long projects, and more power for tricky tasks. On paper, it’s a glow-up: a giant context window that can remember far more of a conversation, different paid tiers that unlock different features, and a warning that switching models may suddenly make your usage look more expensive. Translation for normal humans: the shiny new version is here, but you may need the right subscription and a fresh chat to avoid weird costs and error messages.

But the real fireworks? The community reaction was less “wow, the future” and more instant eye-roll theater. The standout comment didn’t debate performance, price, or features — it flat-out called the post a duplicate and dropped a link like a mic. That one-word dismissal set the mood fast: less launch-party confetti, more “mods, we’ve already done this.” It’s the kind of brutally efficient internet reaction that turns a product update into a mini-comment-section roast.

So while Kimi is busy explaining model names, speed boosts, and why users may hit baffling access errors, the crowd’s loudest contribution so far is basically, “Cool story, repost.” No sprawling debate, no philosophical AI war, just the wonderfully petty chaos of online communities doing what they do best: skipping the brochure and going straight for the meta-drama.

Key Points

  • Kimi Code currently offers Kimi K3 and Kimi K2.7 Code across three model IDs, with K3 positioned as the flagship model and K2.7 Code available in standard and HighSpeed variants.
  • Kimi K3 supports up to 1M context, while K2.7 Code supports 256k; access to larger context windows and HighSpeed depends on membership tier.
  • Switching models or reasoning effort invalidates the existing context cache, which can increase usage due to re-prefill, so the article recommends starting a new session.
  • A 401 error can result when a user’s plan does not include K3 access, 1M context access, or HighSpeed access.
  • Users can switch models through the Kimi Code CLI, Kimi Code for VS Code, or third-party tools, and K3 may require manual context-window and reasoning-effort configuration.

Hottest takes

"dupe" — unreal6
"dupe of" — unreal6
"https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=48935342" — unreal6
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