Today I tried Claude Code and Codex connected to Blender, and both experiences felt very promising.
What stood out to me was that this is no longer just about whether an AI tool can connect to software. It is starting to become part of the actual workflow: I can hand off an idea to AI more naturally, then move faster into concrete 3D actions and content creation.
I increasingly believe that AI applications that go deeper into office workflows will become much more common. They are not just chat assistants anymore — they are being embedded directly into production processes to help us finish tasks faster and reduce repetitive work.
My biggest takeaway from this test is simple: AI adoption is still at the beginning. The real value is not isolated features, but whether AI can reliably fit into specific scenarios and genuinely improve efficiency.
I’ll keep watching this kind of AI + toolchain combination and see how far it can push the workflow.
English practice note on testing Claude Code and Codex with Blender, with observations on AI adoption in office and creative workflows.