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Working with Mission Control

Once the plan is approved, Droid enters Mission Control — the orchestration view that manages execution. From here you can track progress across features and milestones, see which agents are working on what, and intervene when things need adjustment.
Prefer a visual dashboard? The Desktop and Web apps provide a richer Mission Control experience. See Running in the Desktop/Web.

Intervening and redirecting

Missions are not fire-and-forget. The orchestrator is an agent, and you can talk to it. The most effective way to use Missions is to treat yourself as the project manager — monitoring progress, unblocking workers, and redirecting when the plan needs to change. When something goes wrong — the mission freezes, a worker or milestone gets stuck, or you need to change direction — pause the orchestrator and tell it what you are seeing. See Troubleshooting for common scenarios and example prompts.

A new kind of debugging

The skillset for working with Missions looks less like traditional debugging and more like project management of agents. You are not stepping through code line by line — you are monitoring a team of workers, unblocking them when they get stuck, redirecting them when priorities change, and making judgment calls about when to push through versus when to re-plan. This is a meaningfully different way of working with AI. The core skill is knowing when and how to intervene, not writing the code yourself.

See also