AI tool comparison
AgentMemory vs Caveman
Which one should you ship with? Here is the side-by-side panel verdict, pricing read, reviewer split, and community vote comparison.
Developer Tools
AgentMemory
Persistent cross-session memory for Claude, Cursor, Codex & friends
75%
Panel ship
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Community
Paid
Entry
AgentMemory solves one of the most frustrating problems in AI-assisted development: every new session starts from zero. You re-explain your architecture, re-describe your preferences, and re-surface bugs your agent already encountered last week. AgentMemory captures everything your coding agent does silently in the background, compresses it into searchable memory via its iii-engine framework, and auto-injects relevant context at the start of each new session. Under the hood, it's TypeScript-based and uses SQLite as its storage layer—no external database required. It ships with 51 MCP tools and 12 automatic hooks that fire on agent events without any manual tagging. A built-in real-time viewer lets you browse and replay past sessions. Benchmarks show 92% fewer tokens consumed compared to re-feeding raw context, and R@5 retrieval accuracy of 95.2% across its test suite of 827 cases. It supports Claude Code, Cursor, Gemini CLI, Codex CLI, and several others. With 5.8K GitHub stars and appearing in today's trending charts, this is clearly touching a real nerve. The team claims it's the "#1 persistent memory for AI coding agents based on real-world benchmarks"—a bold claim, but the numbers they're putting forward are hard to ignore. For developers doing serious multi-session agent work, this is worth a serious look.
Developer Tools
Caveman
Cut 75% of LLM output tokens without losing technical accuracy
75%
Panel ship
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Community
Free
Entry
Caveman is a Claude Code skill and AI editor plugin that makes language models respond in compressed, fragment-based prose — dropping articles, filler, and pleasantries while keeping full technical content intact. It offers four intensity levels from Lite (removes fluff, preserves grammar) to Ultra (telegraphic shorthand) and even a classical Chinese mode (文言文) for extreme compression. The result: roughly 65–75% fewer output tokens on average. The plugin ships with companion utilities: caveman-commit for sub-50-char commit messages, caveman-review for one-line PR verdicts with inline annotations, and caveman-compress to shrink documentation fed into sessions by ~46%. Installation is a single command across Claude Code, Cursor, Windsurf, Codex, Copilot, and 40+ other editors via the skills ecosystem. With 27k+ GitHub stars since its Product Hunt launch today, Caveman has struck a nerve with developers who are burning through token budgets on Claude's verbose default style. It's arguably the simplest ROI improvement you can apply to any AI-assisted coding workflow today.
Reviewer scorecard
“51 MCP tools and zero-config hooks is a genuinely thoughtful design. The SQLite-only requirement means nothing to install or manage. This is exactly the kind of glue layer that makes multi-session agent workflows actually viable.”
“This is one of the most practical DX improvements I've seen in the Claude Code ecosystem. Token budgets are a real constraint, and cutting 75% of output without touching correctness is legitimately impressive. One-command install across every editor seals it.”
“The '95.2% retrieval accuracy' benchmark is on their own test suite—we don't know if it holds on real heterogeneous codebases. Memory systems that silently capture everything also risk surfacing stale or wrong context, which could be worse than starting fresh.”
“The 75% figure is self-reported and depends heavily on use case — code-heavy tasks already have dense outputs. There's also a real risk that terse AI responses miss critical nuance in complex debugging sessions, which could cost more time than the token savings are worth.”
“Persistent agent memory is a prerequisite for truly autonomous long-horizon development. The cross-agent compatibility here—Claude, Cursor, Codex all sharing a memory store—points toward a future where agents are interchangeable workers on a shared project memory.”
“This points toward a future where AI assistants adapt their verbosity to context automatically — terse for experienced devs, explanatory for learners. Caveman is a blunt instrument today, but it's validating an interface paradigm shift. The 27k stars say the market agrees.”
“Less re-explaining means more creating. If this actually saves the tokens claimed, that's a real quality-of-life win for anyone who uses AI assistants to produce creative work across long projects.”
“The Wenyan (classical Chinese) mode is genuinely inspired as a design choice — it reframes token compression as an aesthetic rather than a tradeoff. The branding is memorable and the single-sentence tagline does exactly what the product does.”
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