AI tool comparison
Apideck MCP Server 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
Apideck MCP Server
Give AI agents real-time read/write access to 200+ SaaS apps via one MCP server
75%
Panel ship
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Community
Free
Entry
Apideck has launched an MCP (Model Context Protocol) server that gives AI agents unified read/write access to 200+ SaaS applications — CRM, accounting, HRIS, ATS, file storage, and more — through a single normalized API surface. Every resource is exposed as an MCP tool (list, get, create, update, delete), and the schema stays consistent regardless of which underlying provider is connected, so you can swap Salesforce for HubSpot without changing your agent code. Compatible with OpenAI Agents SDK, Cloudflare Agents SDK, and any MCP-compliant agent framework, Apideck's server eliminates the most painful part of enterprise agent development: writing and maintaining dozens of individual API integrations with different schemas, auth flows, and pagination patterns. One connection, normalized data, consistent tools. The timing is well-chosen: as enterprise AI adoption accelerates, the bottleneck has shifted from model capability to data access. Apideck MCP Server directly addresses the "how does my agent actually read and write to the software my company uses" problem, which is currently a major friction point for every enterprise AI team.
Developer Tools
Caveman
Claude Code skill that cuts ~75% of tokens by making Claude talk like a caveman
50%
Panel ship
—
Community
Free
Entry
Caveman is a one-line installable Claude Code skill by Julius Brussee that instructs Claude to respond in ultra-compressed telegraphic language — short imperative verbs, no filler words, minimal articles — while preserving technical accuracy. The conceit is absurd: make Claude sound like a caveman. The result is practical: roughly 75% fewer output tokens per response. This matters because Claude's usage limits are token-based. Power users and teams hitting rate limits on Claude Code subscriptions have found that caveman-style output dramatically extends how many interactions they can run per session. The Hacker News thread hit 333 points the day it launched, with developers sharing variations and reporting measurable drops in token consumption for coding workflows. The project also spawned a fork (Caveman-Claude by om-patel5) that packages it as a higher-performance optimization layer with additional context-compression techniques. What started as a joke about caveman grammar is becoming a serious prompt-engineering pattern for token efficiency.
Reviewer scorecard
“Normalized schemas across 200+ SaaS APIs exposed as MCP tools — this eliminates weeks of integration work per enterprise agent deployment. The ability to swap providers without changing agent code is the killer feature; it future-proofs your agent against vendor changes.”
“I tested this against my normal Claude Code sessions and the token reduction is real — closer to 60-70% in practice, but that's still significant. For long refactoring sessions where I'm hitting usage walls, this is now a permanent part of my setup. One-line install is the right distribution model.”
“Apideck isn't new — they've been building unified API infrastructure since 2021, and this MCP wrapper is a marketing play on existing technology. The abstraction layer also means you lose access to provider-specific features and advanced APIs, which matters a lot for complex enterprise workflows.”
“This is a workaround for Anthropic's pricing model, not a solution. The caveman syntax makes outputs harder to read and copy-paste — you'll spend cognitive overhead parsing the response. And if Anthropic changes how usage limits work, this approach becomes irrelevant overnight. It's a clever hack, not a durable tool.”
“MCP is becoming the USB standard for AI tool connectivity, and Apideck's 200+ normalized integrations make them an immediate kingmaker in enterprise agentic workflows. The company that owns the 'AI agent connectivity layer' for enterprise SaaS is going to be enormously valuable.”
“This is a data point in the larger story about prompt efficiency becoming a discipline. As token costs dominate AI budgets, compressing output without losing semantics will be a genuine engineering skill. Caveman is silly — but the underlying insight about output verbosity being a lever is serious.”
“Being able to connect an AI agent to my project management tools, file storage, and CRM through one MCP server — without writing custom integrations — is a genuine workflow unlock. Even for smaller creative teams, 'one connection to rule them all' saves enormous setup friction.”
“For any creative workflow — writing, design iteration, content generation — caveman output is actively counterproductive. The compressed style strips the nuance and polish from responses that make AI useful for creative work. This is a developer tool with a very specific use case.”
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