
Vridia is a multi-agent orchestration system built for enterprise software development teams. It goes beyond coordination — it governs. Most multi-agent frameworks treat agents as parallel workers executing tasks independently. Vridia introduces a hierarchical layer where an Architect agent, powered by Gemini Pro, defines architectural constraints before any specialist acts. Those constraints are locked into a persistent knowledge base and respected by all agents across sessions. When a specialist proposes something that contradicts an existing constraint, the system detects the conflict autonomously. The task is suspended, a dedicated Knowledge Acquisition Agent activates to retrieve validated external knowledge, and the specialist re-executes informed by what was missing. No human intervention required. This is Architectural Drift Detection — autonomous governance that prevents agents from diverging from established technical decisions, even across independent sessions. Vridia's knowledge lifecycle goes beyond retrieval. Every output goes through a validation cycle: Hypothesis, Validated, Failed, or Constraint. What fails is recorded as failure, not forgotten. What is validated across multiple sessions becomes a constraint all agents inherit. The system does not start from zero. It starts from everything already learned and verified. Specialists execute in parallel within Architect-defined boundaries, with mandatory cross-validation by independent domain agents. No specialist evaluates its own output. Confirmation bias is structural in LLMs — the system is designed not to rely on self-assessment. Deployed on Vultr, powered by Gemini Pro for architectural reasoning, Vridia demonstrates that multi-agent systems can coordinate, govern, and learn simultaneously.
19 May 2026