The landscape of AI agents has shifted from simple "one-shot" prompting to complex agentic workflows.
Here is a breakdown of the most prominent agentic architectures and the frameworks that power them.
1. ReAct (Reason + Act)
The Concept: ReAct is the "grandfather" of agentic design. It forces the LLM to generate a Thought (reasoning step) before performing an Action (calling a tool), and then process an Observation (result from the tool).
Architecture: Linear loop (Thought → Action → Observation).
Example Tool: LangChain (specifically the
AgentExecutor).Best For: Simple, multi-step tasks where the next step depends entirely on the outcome of the current one.
2. Graph-Based Architecture
The Concept: Instead of a linear loop, graph architectures represent the agent’s logic as a Directed Acyclic Graph (DAG) or a cyclic graph.
Architecture: State Machines (Nodes and Edges).
Example Tool: LangGraph.
Best For: Complex, "human-in-the-loop" workflows where you need fine-grained control, cycles (looping back to fix errors), and state management.
3. ReWOO (Reasoning Without Observation)
The Concept: Traditional ReAct agents can be slow because they wait for tool outputs before planning the next step.
Architecture: Planner → Worker → Solver.
Example Tool: LangGraph (can be used to implement ReWOO patterns) or CrewAI.
Best For: Reducing latency and token costs when tool calls are independent of each other.
4. Multi-Agent Systems (Role-Playing)
The Concept: Instead of one "super agent," you break the task down into specialized agents (e.g., a "Researcher," a "Writer," and a "Manager").
Architecture: Hierarchical or Sequential collaboration.
Example Tool: Autogen (Microsoft) or CrewAI.
Best For: Large-scale projects like software development or comprehensive market research where different "personas" add value.
5. Plan-and-Execute
The Concept: Similar to ReWOO but more iterative. The agent first creates a long-term plan, executes the first few steps, and then re-plans based on the results.
Architecture: Planner → Executor → Re-planner.
Example Tool: BabyAGI or AutoGPT.
Best For: Open-ended goals where the path to the solution is highly uncertain.
Summary Comparison Table
| Architecture | Primary Logic | Speed | Complexity | Best Framework |
| ReAct | Iterative loop | Slow | Low | LangChain |
| Graph | State Machine | Variable | High | LangGraph |
| ReWOO | Pre-planned steps | Fast | Medium | LangGraph / CrewAI |
| Multi-Agent | Collaboration | Slow | High | Autogen / CrewAI |
We are currently in a "Great Migration" period for agentic frameworks. As of 2026, the industry has largely moved away from "black-box" executors toward explicit, graph-based control.
Here is the re-confirmed, updated breakdown of these architectures based on the latest 2026 standards.
1. The Migration: LangChain → LangGraph
You are correct: LangChain has officially deprecated AgentExecutor (the legacy ReAct implementation).
Key Note: While "ReAct" still exists as a reasoning strategy, it is no longer the architecture in LangChain. It is now just one specific way to configure a Graph.
2. Updated Architectures (2026 Standards)
A. Graph Architecture (State Machines)
Instead of a hidden loop, every step is a Node and every transition is an Edge.
Current Standard: LangGraph.
The Change: LangChain 0.x used
AgentExecutor(a pre-built loop). LangGraph 1.0+ requires you to define aStateGraph. You explicitly draw where the agent goes if a tool fails or if a human needs to approve a step.Example: A customer support bot that cycles between "Search Documentation" and "Ask User for Clarification" until a confidence score is met.
B. Event-Driven & Conversational (The New AutoGen)
While graphs are rigid, Microsoft's AutoGen (v0.4+) has moved toward an Event-Driven Architecture.
Current Standard: AutoGen.
Mechanism: Agents act like microservices. They publish "events" (e.g.,
TaskCompletedEvent), and other agents subscribe to them.Best For: Massive systems (thousands of agents) where a static graph would become a "spaghetti" mess of lines.
C. Role-Based Hierarchical (The CrewAI Way)
CrewAI has doubled down on the Manager-Worker architecture.
Current Standard: CrewAI.
Mechanism: It uses a "Process" (Sequential or Hierarchical). You define a
Manageragent that acts as the orchestrator, delegating tasks to specificRoles.Best For: Business processes where you need a clear "boss" agent to review work before finishing.
D. ReWOO (Reasoning Without Observation)
This remains the gold standard for low-latency and cost-saving.
Current Standard: Implemented as a specific template within LangGraph.
Mechanism: It breaks the task into a
Planner,Worker, andSolver. The Planner creates a "blueprint" with placeholders (e.g., "Find the price of $X$ and $Y$"). Tools run in parallel, and the Solver fills in the blanks.Status: It is now considered a "Design Pattern" rather than a standalone tool.
Quick Reference: What to use in 2026?
| If you want... | Use this Architecture | Latest Tooling |
| Total Control / Debugging | Graph-Based | LangGraph |
| Autonomous Collaboration | Event-Driven | AutoGen 0.4+ |
| Business Workflows | Role-Based / Hierarchical | CrewAI |
| Speed & Low Cost | ReWOO (Planning) | LangGraph Templates |