Loom v0.7.4 is out for macOS, Linux and Windows

Capabilities

Six sessions. One goal.

Loom Conductor drives six real Claude Code CLI sessions in parallel, each in its own terminal, all running on the Claude login you already have. No API key for the fleet, no wrappers, no imitation.

The fleet

Real sessions, not simulations.

The real TUI

Every terminal in the fleet runs the actual Claude Code CLI with its full interface. What you see is exactly what the agent sees, down to the last character.

Your Claude login

The fleet signs in with the Claude account you already use. No API key is needed to run six sessions, and there is no Loom account to create on top of it.

Watch or take over

Click into any terminal and type. Steer one session by hand while the other five keep working, then step back and let the Conductor resume.

Under the hood

The CLI you trust, six times over.

Each session runs in a native PTY inside Loom's WebGL terminal, streaming live whether you are watching or not. Permission prompts are handled for you: auto-accept presses only the safe affirmative, you can toggle it off, and shift+tab cycles a single terminal's permission mode. When a session hits a rate limit or stalls, Loom recovers it. When a usage limit lands, Loom can rotate pooled Claude accounts and keep the mission moving.

any fleet terminal
# sign in once with your Claude account
$ claude login
# every fleet terminal runs the real CLI
$ claude

Questions

The fleet, in practice.

Do I need an API key to run the fleet?

No. The six Claude Code sessions run on your existing Claude login. The only key you bring is for the Conductor, the reasoning model that plans and dispatches, and that can be any of a dozen providers or a local model.

What happens when a session hits a usage limit?

Loom recovers rate limits and stalls automatically, and it can rotate pooled Claude accounts when a usage limit hits, so a long mission keeps moving without you babysitting it. See account rotation for the details.

How do I follow six terminals at once?

You do not have to. The mission DAG and live activity strips show what every session is doing and how far the goal has come. Drop into a single terminal only when you want to.

Hand it the work.
Walk away.

macOS, Linux, and Windows. Around 13 MB. Free and open source.