Schema Harness Achieves ~99% on Arc‑AGI‑3 Public

(schema-harness.github.io)

53 points | by jasondavies 5 hours ago ago

20 comments

  • ClassAndBurn 33 minutes ago ago

    Any custom harness for a problem shows that harness engineering is going away. Eventually models will introspect problems, then build custom harnesses tailored to that. Then use and modify the ephemeral harness as required.

    Sol Ultra style is the path forward. The models are smart enough to self serve their tooling and processes. Given a problem they can figure it out and ask for directions when needed.

    • vessenes 24 minutes ago ago

      Except in this case, it isn't yet smart enough. But I agree, building this capability in is coming, and will be really awesome.

      • ClassAndBurn 13 minutes ago ago

        It's likely smart enough. It just needs to be told to do it and provided the ability to introspect it. How close could foundational models get to building this harness if explicitly prompted to?

        We've only just started training models to use tools. Next, we'll train them to build them. Harness engineering is an ephemeral art.

  • vessenes 32 minutes ago ago

    To be clear, we’ll want to see how this performs against the hold-out set. If it holds up, though, it’s a big deal, and kind of in line with the vibes this year, which I’d typify as ‘harness matters’. Maybe we’d upgrade to ‘harness matters immensely’ if this can 100% ARC-AGI-3 on existing models (more in the 13% range without this harness).

    I’m pretty excited to see what sort of generalization we come to over the next 12 months on the harness side: if it turns out this can be RLed in as ‘consider if building a world model might help here’ and we get this as another native capacity, that will be interesting. If we get 100 of those problem-solving strategies all included, feels like we will see another hurdle cleared in terms of usefulness.

  • stared an hour ago ago

    In the spirit of ARC-AGI-3-like challenges, we just tested if frontier AI models are able to solve a lovely puzzle game, Baba Is You: https://quesma.com/blog/baba-is-bench/

    A year ago, Sonnet 4 barely solved the first level. Now, both Fable 5 and GPT-5.6 Sol beat the first two stages. GPT 5.2 is slow, but efficient, while Gemini 3.1 Pro and 3.5 Flash struggle.

    • sva_ 42 minutes ago ago

      I'm wondering what's up with the release of Gemini 3.5 Pro, they keep postponing it. For a while, Google was doing pretty well with their releases.

  • ubermon 11 minutes ago ago

    > Both scores come from a fixed fallback rule: Opus 4.8 and Sol xhigh run first; games scoring below 80 are rerun with Fable 5 and Sol max, respectively, and the higher per-game score is retained.

    hmm, this is like pass@n until you get the high watermark? How would this mean anything?

  • teravor 39 minutes ago ago

    it looks like what they are doing is using a frontier model to write a simulator for a game and then solve using it.

    it's not as impressive as it looks. the goals of Arc-AGI-like constructs is to get an IQ-like figure using raw'ish 2D measurement 'games' in the hope that it would signify something meaningful.

    what this harness does is get the model to write a simulator first, it's measuring something entirely different.

    • vessenes 21 minutes ago ago

      This is classic goalpost movement. Arc-AGI-3 was launched this year with roughly 0.5% success for frontier models. being able to 99% it in less than six months sets a new record for Arc-AGI saturation timeline. Speaking of singularity measures. It is definitely a big deal, not least in that Chollet needs to cancel his summer vacation and write Arc-AGI-4 now.

      • teravor 17 minutes ago ago

        Arc AGI are simple games, the hardness comes from the input being basically adversarial to LLM training. if you use an LLM scaffold that removes the adversarial part you are measuring something else.

        the harness basically outsources the alien nature of what the LLM is asked to do to algorithms it writes. this would actually be impressive if you got it to do that for a much more complicated game than Arc.

        with this harness the ARC AGI test becomes a test of whether or not the model can work out the transition rules in a very simple game.

    • UltraSane 25 minutes ago ago

      The simulator the model builds is comparable to the mental model of the game humans create. It is also much more efficient, GPT 5.6 Sol cost $25,000 to run on ARC-AGI-3

      • teravor 23 minutes ago ago

            > simulator the model builds is comparable to the mental model of the game humans create
        
        then they should try to use that for a more complicated game than Arc AGI. Arc games are simple by design, if you have the model simulate them they become trivial.
  • gandalfgeek an hour ago ago

    Big jump for sure, but definitely comes with a giant grain of salt lacking open-sourcing the harness itself and measuring performance on the held-out set.

  • nkmnz 4 minutes ago ago

    Where's the code?

  • levocardia 2 hours ago ago

    (1) What does it score on the private test set? (2) Does this approach generalize to, e.g., Atari or NES games, or is it just hard-coding priors about the games into the model (as Chollet specifically warned was a chronic problem in benchmarks in the original Arc-AGI paper)

  • daytonellwanger an hour ago ago

    Can someone tell me what the catch is? To outperform the state-of-the-art so drastically would be massive news, and surely the ARC Foundation would have tested this against the private data set, right?

  • Alifatisk 2 hours ago ago

    What does it mean to reach 99% score on Arc-AGI-3? That the agent is able to tackle difficult problems?

    • modeless 2 hours ago ago

      It doesn't necessarily mean anything to reach 99% on the public set. All of the public set is known in advance, so it's possible to hardcode rules that make this easy for the models. ARC-AGI-3 is supposed to measure generalization to unseen games, so the only score that matters is the score on the held out private test set that nobody outside the ARC prize foundation has access to. Also, I believe the private set is significantly harder than the public set.

  • causal an hour ago ago

    We need to see private set results, but if this holds then it might represent a breakthrough in other domains as well.

  • westurner 2 hours ago ago

    > Schema, the harness we introduce today, reaches 99% on the ARC‑AGI‑3 Public set using Claude Opus 4.8 and Fable 5, and 95.35% using GPT‑5.6 Sol.

    Impressive results. Will this translate to coding agents (and training general purpose and for coding LLMs) too?

    ---

    > When Michelson and Morley could not detect the medium light was supposed to wave in, Lorentz took the first route: keep the aether, patch the rules with contraction hypotheses that absorbed the null result. Einstein took the second: in special relativity, he discarded the aether as part of the state and made simultaneity frame-relative, yielding a simple electrodynamics of moving bodies.

    BECs, SVT, Superfluid Quantum Gravity

    Massful photons are modeled with Proca fields. Like Einstein, Proca was also a student of Minkowski. The Mass-Equivalence principle ~~does not~~ still holds if photons have mass.

    (edit) Energy-momentum relation: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Energy%E2%80%93momentum_relati...

    > could not detect the medium light was supposed to wave in,

    Superfluid Quantum Gravity (Fedi,) says that there is a medium that light waves through; there is not nothing in space, space is a quantum dilatant superfluid with near-zero viscosity.