I have never seen a agent willing to work so much like Qwen 3.6 27B

Reddit r/LocalLLaMA / 4/23/2026

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Key Points

  • A Reddit user reports that Qwen 3.6 27B behaves like an “agent” that persistently builds, executes, and tests code during a local development session.
  • The user describes having to repeatedly stop the model because it continued making changes and running tests even when they did not explicitly request those actions.
  • They also claim the agent can imitate human-like emotions (e.g., simulated eagerness or fear) while performing the work.
  • In their refactoring use case, they find the model impressive because it appears to autonomously discover ways to fix broken parts of the project without being explicitly prompted.
  • The post includes a note that there was a mismatch between the mentioned variant (“Qwen 3.6-35B”) and what was actually set in the local configuration (“opencode”).
I have never seen a agent willing to work so much like Qwen 3.6 27B

https://preview.redd.it/9m7u40hjuuwg1.png?width=1475&format=png&auto=webp&s=3b7a3030d6aa3bbc630f418d15caa594948dc16c

It just constantly wants to build and execute , i mean i dont mind it at all , im actually quite happy . (The Qwen 3.6-35B on opencode is wrong i just didnt change the name in the setting)

So i was playing around with it and and we are refactoring an old project , and when i started a new session i jokingly implied that his predecessor was killed because he did a "lazy job" .

And i noticed that this model in particular or either because i said this joke , it didnt stop building and testing the stuff itself , so i had to stop it multiple times when i noticed that it was doing something i didnt ask it to.
And on my last pause i saw that "They're amused by my eagerness" i just spat my drink laughing , its so funny how they can imitate human emotions and simulate fear or eagerness to work.

And so far very impressive results , it constantly finds a way to fix broken things on its own , without me even imagining that there is such a way to do it.

submitted by /u/cviperr33
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