AI tool comparison
AgentMemory vs React Doctor
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
React Doctor
Catch every anti-pattern your AI agent baked into your React app
75%
Panel ship
—
Community
Paid
Entry
React Doctor is a one-command static analysis tool that scans your React codebase and outputs a health score from 0 to 100 alongside a detailed diagnostic report. Run `npx react-doctor@latest .` and it identifies anti-patterns across six dimensions: state & effects, performance, architecture, security, accessibility, and dead code. It auto-detects your framework (Next.js, Vite, React Native) and React version, adjusting rules accordingly. The tool was built by Million.co—the team behind the Million.js performance library—and is clearly aimed at the post-AI-coding era. Its killer feature might be the "agent instruction installation" mode: it teaches Claude Code, Cursor, and other coding agents the project's quality rules, so future agent-written code conforms to them before React Doctor even runs. It also integrates with GitHub Actions and can post PR comments with health score diffs, making it easy to catch regressions before merge. With 8.7K stars and one of today's fastest-growing GitHub repos, the timing is perfect. Developers are increasingly shipping agent-written React code they didn't review line by line, and React Doctor fills the gap. It's MIT-licensed, requires no config to get started, and the CI integration takes about five minutes to set up.
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.”
“The GitHub Actions integration with PR health score diffs is the feature I didn't know I needed. Installing it took three minutes and immediately flagged three useEffect anti-patterns Cursor introduced last week.”
“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.”
“Static analysis for React isn't new—ESLint with react-hooks/exhaustive-deps, Biome, and others already catch most of these patterns. The 'health score' framing may encourage false confidence if teams focus on the number rather than the individual findings.”
“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.”
“Teaching agents the rules upfront rather than fixing their output afterward is the right architectural direction. As agent-written code becomes the norm, tools that close the feedback loop at the prompt level will be as important as compilers.”
“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.”
“For designer-developers who use Cursor or v0 to prototype quickly, this is a sanity check that doesn't require deep React expertise. A green health score before shipping is a meaningful confidence boost.”
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