The Magic Tool V31 Access
I have v42 installed on my machine right now. It is objectively better. It integrates with the cloud. It has a chatbot embedded in the sidebar that tries to make small talk. It can generate assets from a text prompt.
But it lacks the spirit of v31.
The designers of v31 understood something that modern developers have forgotten in their rush to monetize engagement: A magic tool should feel like magic, not like a magic show. Magic is invisible; it is the effortless transition from intent to result. A magic show is about the spectacle, the flashing lights, the "Look at what I can do!" the magic tool v31
Modern software is a magic show. It wants you to know how hard it is working. It wants your data. It wants to upsell you. v31, by contrast, was a tool of the shadows. It took your raw, unformed thought and manifested it on the screen without asking for credit.
I find myself longing for the specific shade of grey in the v31 interface. I miss the specific thwump sound the export button made. These are not rational complaints; they are the phantom limbs of a digital life amputated. I have v42 installed on my machine right now
We added only three new capabilities. But they change everything.
Q: Is The Magic Tool v31 available for Mac, Windows, and Linux? A: Yes. Native binaries are available for Windows 10/11, macOS 12+, and all major Linux distributions (Ubuntu, Fedora, Arch). It has a chatbot embedded in the sidebar
Q: Will this slow down my computer? A: No. The Magic Tool v31 uses less than 1% CPU idle and peaks at 15% during complex macro execution. It is built in Rust, making it incredibly lightweight.
Q: Can I sell the automations I build? A: The community license allows you to share scripts for free. For commercial resale, you need a developer license (contact sales).
Q: I tried the old v20, and it was buggy. What changed? A: Everything. The Magic Tool v31 is a complete rewrite. The team replaced the old interpreter with a new microkernel architecture. Crash rates are down by 99.7% based on telemetry data.