AI tool comparison
Chrome DevTools MCP vs OmX (Oh My Codex)
Which one should you ship with? Here is the side-by-side panel verdict, pricing read, reviewer split, and community vote comparison.
Developer Tools
Chrome DevTools MCP
Give your AI agent full access to a live Chrome session
75%
Panel ship
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Community
Free
Entry
Chrome DevTools MCP is an official MCP (Model Context Protocol) server from Google's Chrome DevTools team that gives AI coding agents — Claude, Cursor, Cline, GitHub Copilot — full, bidirectional access to a live Chrome browser session. Agents can click, fill forms, inspect the DOM, run JavaScript in the console, monitor network traffic, capture screenshots, run Lighthouse performance audits, and attach to existing authenticated sessions without re-entering credentials. Unlike headless browser automation tools that spin up a fresh, blank Chrome instance, Chrome DevTools MCP attaches to your already-signed-in browser. That means agents can meaningfully interact with apps requiring auth — personal email, internal dashboards, SaaS tools — without exposing credentials in plaintext. For developers building or debugging web apps, this collapses the gap between writing code and interacting with the live product. The project hit 35,000+ GitHub stars within days of appearing on GitHub Trending, one of the fastest ascents of any MCP server to date. The organic demand signals a shift: developers don't just want agents that write code, they want agents that can see and interact with the browser the same way a human tester would.
Developer Tools
OmX (Oh My Codex)
Supercharge Codex CLI with multi-agent teams, hooks & live HUDs
75%
Panel ship
—
Community
Free
Entry
Oh My Codex (OmX) is an open-source orchestration layer that wraps around OpenAI's Codex CLI without replacing it. Built by indie developer Yeachan-Heo, it adds the multi-agent infrastructure that Codex CLI conspicuously lacks: spawning parallel worker agents in isolated git worktrees, a persistent project memory file (.omx/project-memory.json) that survives context pruning, and extensible event hooks via .omx/hooks/*.mjs. The standout feature is the live Heads-Up Display — run 'omx hud --watch' and get a real-time terminal dashboard showing which agents are running, what they've done, and where they're stuck. Special built-in commands like $deep-interview (intent clarification), $ralplan (consensus planning with trade-off review), and $ralph (persistent execution until verified) give structured workflows on top of raw Codex intelligence. OmX fills a real gap: power users of Codex CLI were already duct-taping together scripts to coordinate agents and persist state. OmX makes that native, composable, and observable — without forking the core engine. It's already integrating with OpenClaw for cross-tool memory sharing.
Reviewer scorecard
“This is the missing piece for AI-assisted web development. My agent can now write a component, open Chrome, visually inspect it, run Lighthouse, and file a bug — all without me touching the keyboard. The existing-session attachment is the killer feature; no more surrendering credentials to a headless browser.”
“The primitive here is clean: a process supervisor and state manager for Codex CLI agents, using git worktrees as isolation boundaries — which is exactly the right call, not an invented abstraction. The DX bet is that complexity lives in `.omx/` config and hook files rather than a CLI flag explosion, and that's the right place for it; the `$ralph` loop pattern in particular solves a real problem I've personally scripted around three times. The weekend-alternative test is close — you could duct-tape worktree spawning and a JSON state file yourself — but the live HUD and hook system would take a week, not a weekend, and the result would be worse. Earns the ship on the hooks-as-composition primitive alone.”
“Handing an AI agent full Chrome access in your authenticated session is a significant attack surface. One prompt injection from a malicious webpage and your agent is executing arbitrary actions on every logged-in account in your browser. The project has no sandboxing or action approval layer yet — for anything beyond local dev, I'd wait for a security audit.”
“Category is Codex CLI orchestration, and the direct competitor is OpenAI itself — which has every incentive to ship native multi-agent coordination the moment it becomes a retention driver, at which point OmX's entire value proposition evaporates. The specific scenario where this breaks is any team larger than one: `.omx/project-memory.json` as a flat file is going to produce race conditions and merge conflicts the moment two engineers are running agents against the same repo simultaneously. What kills this in 12 months is OpenAI shipping native agent orchestration in Codex CLI — not 'if,' when — and the tool would need either a model-agnostic architecture or a community-owned memory backend to earn a ship.”
“Browser-native agent access was always the obvious end state — this is just the first time it's come from the team that actually owns the DevTools protocol. The combination of MCP standardization + official Chrome backing creates a durable foundation that third-party tools will build on for years.”
“The thesis here is falsifiable: within two years, the bottleneck in AI-assisted development shifts from individual agent capability to coordination overhead — and the team that owns the orchestration layer owns the workflow. OmX is betting on git worktrees as the canonical isolation primitive for agent parallelism, which is a smart bet because it composes with every existing tool in the developer stack without requiring new infrastructure. The second-order effect that matters isn't faster coding — it's that the `.omx/hooks/*.mjs` pattern turns OmX into an event bus for AI agent actions, which means the real play is cross-tool coordination (the OpenClaw integration is the tell). OmX is early on the multi-agent dev tooling trend line, which is exactly where you want to be if the thesis holds.”
“For front-end designers, this is huge — I can now ask my agent to screenshot my live prototype, compare it against a Figma export, and highlight visual regressions. No more manually diffing screenshots between builds. It turns visual QA from a chore into something the agent just handles.”
“The job-to-be-done is singular and honest: coordinate multiple Codex CLI agents on a shared codebase without losing your mind or your context. Onboarding is a GitHub clone and one config file, and the live HUD delivers value inside the first five minutes — you can actually see what your agents are doing, which is the moment current Codex CLI users feel the problem acutely. The one real completeness gap is that `project-memory.json` as a single JSON file is going to hit a wall fast on larger projects, and there's no apparent answer for conflict resolution yet; that gap keeps this in the 'power user only' tier for now, but it's a solvable problem and the core product opinion — agents should be observable and stateful — is the right one.”
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