AI tool comparison
GLM-5V-Turbo vs Qwen3.6-35B-A3B
Which one should you ship with? Here is the side-by-side panel verdict, pricing read, reviewer split, and community vote comparison.
AI Models
GLM-5V-Turbo
The first natively multimodal vision-coding model built for agentic workflows
75%
Panel ship
—
Community
Paid
Entry
GLM-5V-Turbo is Z.ai's (the international brand of Zhipu AI) latest model — and the first in the GLM family built as a native multimodal agent from the ground up. Released April 1, 2026, it combines vision, video, and text input with agentic output: tool calling, task decomposition, and GUI interaction, all in a single model without vision bolted on as an afterthought. The architecture is built around a new visual encoder called CogViT, trained with reinforcement learning across 30+ task types, and supports a 200K context window with INT8 quantization for fast inference. The practical sweet spot is the "visual artifact → code" pipeline: screenshot-to-HTML, UI component extraction from design mockups, screen recording analysis, and front-end scaffolding from design assets. In early benchmarks, GLM-5V-Turbo outperforms Claude Opus 4.6 on several multimodal benchmarks. It integrates seamlessly with OpenClaw and Claude Code for the full loop — "understand the environment → plan actions → execute tasks" — and is available via the Z.ai API and OpenRouter. For developers building agentic pipelines that start with visual input, this may be the most capable model to benchmark in 2026.
AI Models
Qwen3.6-35B-A3B
35B MoE model with only 3B active params that beats models 10× its inference size
75%
Panel ship
—
Community
Paid
Entry
Alibaba's Qwen team has released Qwen3.6-35B-A3B, a Mixture-of-Experts model that activates just 3 billion parameters per forward pass while drawing on 35 billion total. The result is frontier coding performance at the inference cost of a small model — it outperforms comparable dense models 10× its active size on agentic coding benchmarks. The native context window is 262K tokens, extensible to 1,010,000 tokens for long-document tasks. A standout feature is "thinking preservation" — the model retains reasoning context across turns in iterative development sessions, reducing the need to re-explain state in long agent loops. GGUF quantizations from Unsloth are already live for local use via Ollama, LM Studio, and llama.cpp, and the model lands well within the VRAM budget of a single 24 GB GPU at Q4_K_M. For developers, Qwen3.6-35B-A3B represents a genuinely efficient path to near-frontier coding capability without paying frontier API prices or needing server-grade hardware. The Apache 2.0 license means commercial use is unrestricted, making it a strong candidate for self-hosted coding agent backends.
Reviewer scorecard
“Screenshot-to-production-code is the workflow I've been waiting for. GLM-5V-Turbo's native multimodal architecture means it doesn't lose fidelity when switching between seeing the design and writing the implementation. The OpenClaw integration makes it plug into existing pipelines immediately.”
“If you're running a self-hosted coding agent and paying $X/month in API bills, this is your exit ramp. 3B active params means a single 4090 can serve it comfortably, and the 262K context actually handles real codebases. Ship it as your backend and tune from there.”
“Benchmark claims from model providers deserve serious scrutiny. 'Beats Opus 4.6 on multimodal benchmarks' is a cherry-picked comparison — we need independent evaluations across diverse real-world tasks before making architectural decisions. Also, the Z.ai data residency story for enterprise is unclear.”
“We've seen 'beats models 10× its size' claims before — benchmark cherry-picking is rampant. The thinking preservation feature sounds promising, but agentic loop reliability is something you discover in production, not on leaderboards. Run your own evals before committing an entire stack to this.”
“The model arms race is increasingly about multimodal-native architectures, not just bigger text models. GLM-5V-Turbo signals that Chinese frontier labs are now genuinely competing on architecture innovation, not just scale. Expect this to pressure OpenAI and Anthropic to ship stronger native vision-coding models.”
“MoE is increasingly the dominant paradigm for the efficiency frontier, and this is one of the clearest demonstrations of why. 3B active params at 35B effective capacity is not a trick — it's an architecture win. The line between 'local model' and 'frontier model' is erasing faster than anyone predicted.”
“The GUI interaction capability is huge for creative tooling — a model that can look at a Figma file and generate the component code directly eliminates the translation layer that kills creative momentum. This is the most exciting vision-to-code model I've seen since GPT-4V.”
“1M token context on a local model is a game-changer for creative workflows — entire novel manuscripts, full design system docs, long-form scripts fit in a single window. The zero API cost means no throttling during high-creativity sprints. This earns a spot in the local toolkit.”
Weekly AI Tool Verdicts
Get the next comparison in your inbox
New AI tools ship daily. We compare them before you waste an afternoon.