CodeClash is a benchmark for evaluating AI systems on goal-oriented software engineering.
Today's AI coding evals are task-oriented (e.g., HumanEval, SWE-bench). Models are given explicit instructions. We then verify correctness with unit tests.
But building software is fundamentally driven by goals ("improve user retention", "reduce costs", "increase revenue"). Reaching our goals via code is a self-directed, iterative, and often competitive process. To capture this dynamism of real software development, we introduce CodeClash!
Check out our arXiv paper and website for the full details!
# Clone the repository
git clone https://github.com/CodeClash-ai/CodeClash.git
cd CodeClash
# Install uv (if you haven't already)
curl -LsSf https://astral.sh/uv/install.sh | sh
# Install dependencies and create virtual environment
uv sync --extra dev
# Set up your environment variables
cp .env.example .env # Then edit .env with your GITHUB_TOKEN
# Run a test battle
uv run codeclash run configs/test/battlesnake.yaml
[!TIP] CodeClash requires Docker to create execution environments. CodeClash was developed and tested on Ubuntu 22.04.4 LTS. The same instructions should work for Mac. If not, check out #81 for an alternative solution.
Alternative: Using pip (not recommended)
pip install -e '.[dev]'
codeclash run configs/test/battlesnake.yaml
Once this works, you should be set up to run a real tournament! To run Claude Sonnet 4.5 against o3 in a BattleSnake tournament with 5 rounds and 1000 competition simulations per round, run:
uv run codeclash run configs/examples/BattleSnake__claude-sonnet-4-5-20250929__o3__r5__s1000.yaml

In CodeClash, 2+ coding agents compete in a code arena over the course of a multi-round tournament.
For the duration of the tournament, each agent is iteratively improving their own codebase to win a high-level, competitive objective (e.g., accumulate resources, survive the longest, etc).
Each round consists of two phases:
Critically, LMs don't play the game directly. Their code serves as their competitive proxy. The winner is the LM agent who wins the most rounds.
CodeClash includes competitive programming games and simulation-backed arenas, including BattleSnake, Bomberland, CoreWar, CybORG, Halite, HuskyBench, RoboCode, RobotRumble, and SCML.
We're actively working on several follow ups! Check out the Contributing Guide for more.
Contact Person: John Yang, Kilian Lieret (Email: johnby@stanford.edu, kl5675@princeton.edu)
MIT. Check LICENSE for more information.
@misc{yang2025codeclashbenchmarkinggoalorientedsoftware,
title={CodeClash: Benchmarking Goal-Oriented Software Engineering},
author={John Yang and Kilian Lieret and Joyce Yang and Carlos E. Jimenez and Ofir Press and Ludwig Schmidt and Diyi Yang},
year={2025},
eprint={2511.00839},
archivePrefix={arXiv},
primaryClass={cs.SE},
url={https://arxiv.org/abs/2511.00839},
}
$ claude mcp add CodeClash \
-- python -m otcore.mcp_server <graph>