OpenAI Is Folding Three Desktop Apps Into One Superapp
On March 19, 2026, OpenAI confirmed it is combining its three main desktop products — the ChatGPT app, the Codex coding platform, and the Atlas browser — into a single unified desktop application. The company’s Chief of Applications, Fidji Simo, confirmed the plan on X after The Wall Street Journal first reported it. OpenAI President Greg Brockman will lead the product overhaul, while Simo leads the sales and marketing effort for the new app.
The decision follows an internal all-hands meeting on March 16, 2026, where Simo told employees the company had spread itself too thin. ChatGPT has 900 million weekly active users as of February 2026 — but pressure from rival Anthropic, whose Claude Code reached $2.5 billion in annualised run-rate revenue by February 2026, pushed OpenAI to consolidate. No launch date for the superapp has been set. The ChatGPT mobile app is not part of this merger and will remain unchanged.
For more on OpenAI’s AI model strategy, see our coverage of OpenAI’s GPT-5 family pricing and benchmarks.
OpenAI’s Codex app, launched February 2, 2026 — one of the three products being merged into the superapp. Source: OpenAI
Each product launched separately over the past year. Here’s what each one does and when it arrived.
ChatGPT Atlas browser, launched October 21, 2025 for macOS. Source: OpenAI
The superapp’s central promise is agentic AI: the system autonomously completes multi-step tasks across chat, coding, and the web. Click each step to see which app handled it before — and how the superapp changes the experience.
Before the superapp: you would open three separate apps to complete this task. With the superapp, one interface handles all of it. Tap each step to see the difference.
Tap each event to expand the details.
Choose a category to compare what the fragmented setup looked like versus what the superapp is designed to deliver.
Before — 3 Separate Apps
- Switch between ChatGPT, Atlas, and Codex apps separately
- No shared context between sessions
- Three interfaces to manage
- Manual copy-paste between browser and coding tools
- Each tool operates in isolation
After — One Superapp
- Research in Atlas feeds directly into a Codex task — one window
- ChatGPT acts as the orchestrating layer
- Unified session context across all three functions
- Agentic AI completes multi-step tasks autonomously
- No context-switching between apps
Before
- Broad consumer market focus
- Chatbot-first product identity
- Mix of casual and professional use
- Consumer subscriptions as primary revenue driver
After
- Aggressive pivot toward enterprise and developer users
- Productivity and coding at the centre
- “High-compute users” as the primary target
- Matching Anthropic’s enterprise-first approach
Before
- Separate engineering teams per app
- Research division split across multiple products
- Fragmented quality control
- Hard to identify core company strategy internally
After
- Teams consolidated around one central product
- Research division focuses on improving one app
- Simo leads marketing; Brockman leads product + org changes
- Clearer internal direction per Simo’s internal memo
Before
- Codex and ChatGPT accessed separately
- Git worktree support only in standalone Codex app
- Browser memory separate from chat session
- Windows Codex only arrived March 4, 2026
After
- Coding, browsing, and chat in a single window
- Agentic AI writes, tests, and commits code autonomously
- Shared context between coding and browsing tasks
- Codex capabilities expanding beyond coding into productivity
Statements sourced from official posts, internal memos, and transcripts reviewed by CNBC. No paraphrasing — these are direct quotes only.
Anthropic’s Claude Code went from $0 to $2.5B in annualised revenue in about nine months — a direct trigger for OpenAI’s consolidation. The bars below show Claude Code’s run-rate revenue growth, sourced from Anthropic’s official Series G announcement.
Data: Anthropic’s official $1B milestone announcement (Nov 2025) and Series G announcement (Feb 2026). Enterprise use accounts for more than half of Claude Code’s revenue. See also: OpenAI’s GPT-5 benchmarks and pricing.
What Was Covered
OpenAI’s plan to merge ChatGPT, the Atlas browser, and the Codex app into a single desktop superapp was confirmed on March 19, 2026. Chief of Applications Fidji Simo and President Greg Brockman are overseeing the transition. The phased rollout is set to begin by expanding Codex’s productivity capabilities before folding in ChatGPT and Atlas. The ChatGPT mobile app is not part of the consolidation. No launch date has been publicly announced.
This article covered the confirmed products being merged, the verified launch dates of each app (Atlas: October 21, 2025; Codex macOS: February 2, 2026; Codex Windows: March 4, 2026), the all-hands meeting context from March 16, 2026, leadership statements from official sources, and the competitive revenue figures from Anthropic’s own announcements.
For related technology developments, see our coverage of NVIDIA’s DLSS 5 neural rendering, Apple AirPods Max 2 with live translation, the Darksword iOS security exploit, and Meta Horizon Worlds shutdown.






