Compare/Devin 2.0 vs Matt Pocock's Skills

AI tool comparison

Devin 2.0 vs Matt Pocock's Skills

Which one should you ship with? Here is the side-by-side panel verdict, pricing read, reviewer split, and community vote comparison.

D

Developer Tools

Devin 2.0

Parallel AI software engineer that resolves Jira and Linear issues autonomously

Mixed

50%

Panel ship

Community

Paid

Entry

Devin 2.0 is an autonomous AI software engineer that can run multiple engineering tasks simultaneously across isolated sandboxed environments. It integrates natively with Jira and Linear to pick up, execute, and close issues end-to-end without human hand-holding. The v2 release focuses on parallelism and project management integration as its primary differentiation over the original Devin.

M

Developer Tools

Matt Pocock's Skills

Reusable Claude agent skills that fix AI coding's biggest failure modes

Ship

75%

Panel ship

Community

Free

Entry

Matt Pocock — the TypeScript educator behind Total TypeScript — dropped a GitHub repo that's currently the #2 trending project on all of GitHub with 7,300+ stars in a single day. It's a curated collection of reusable agent skills for Claude Code and other coding agents, installable with one line: `npx skills@latest add mattpocock/skills`. The skills tackle the four canonical failure modes of AI-assisted development: misalignment (agents build the wrong thing), verbosity (context windows bloated with unnecessary tokens), broken code (no feedback loops), and poor design (architecture degrades over time). Each skill is a focused slash command — `/grill-me`, `/tdd`, `/diagnose`, `/improve-codebase-architecture` — that guides agents through professional engineering practices rather than just writing code. What makes this land differently is Pocock's framing: he argues software engineering fundamentals matter more than ever in the agent era, not less. The repo is built around the insight that agents need structured methodology, not just raw capability. With over 3,200 forks in 24 hours and widespread adoption reports, this is shaping up to be the de facto starting point for anyone building a serious `.claude` directory.

Decision
Devin 2.0
Matt Pocock's Skills
Panel verdict
Mixed · 2 ship / 2 skip
Ship · 3 ship / 1 skip
Community
No community votes yet
No community votes yet
Pricing
Starts at $500/mo (Teams) / Enterprise pricing on request
Open Source / Free
Best for
Parallel AI software engineer that resolves Jira and Linear issues autonomously
Reusable Claude agent skills that fix AI coding's biggest failure modes
Category
Developer Tools
Developer Tools

Reviewer scorecard

Builder
72/100 · ship

The primitive here is a persistent, sandboxed code execution agent that accepts a ticket and returns a PR — that's a real, nameable thing and it's more coherent than most 'AI engineer' pitches. The DX bet is that developers shouldn't have to babysit task delegation; the Jira and Linear integrations are the right place to put that complexity because that's where the work already lives. The moment of truth is whether the parallel sandboxes actually stay independent under real repo conditions — shared state bugs across concurrent agents are exactly the kind of failure that demos hide and production exposes. I'd ship this for teams with high-volume, well-scoped ticket backlogs, but I want to see the failure mode documentation before I trust it with anything touching auth or migrations.

80/100 · ship

This is the missing manual for working with coding agents. The /tdd and /grill-me skills alone have already changed how I approach agent sessions — I actually get working code on the first pass now instead of a beautiful-looking mess that fails every test.

Skeptic
48/100 · skip

The category is autonomous coding agent, and the direct competitors are GitHub Copilot Workspace, Cursor's background agents, and any team that's wrapped Claude or GPT-4o in a loop with tool calls — the last of which is most of what Devin actually is at the infrastructure level. The specific scenario where this breaks is any task requiring cross-repo coordination, domain context that lives in Slack threads rather than tickets, or anything a junior dev would take more than two hours on. What kills this in 12 months: Atlassian ships native AI issue resolution directly into Jira, which they've already telegraphed, and Linear's own AI roadmap isn't standing still — when the project management platform owns the integration, a $500/mo bolt-on loses its only durable hook. To earn a ship, Devin needs to demonstrate measurable PR merge rates on real production repos, not curated demo tasks.

45/100 · skip

Slash commands in a shell script repo going viral is classic GitHub hype. These are just prompts dressed up as methodology — any senior engineer could write these in an afternoon, and half your team will ignore them after week two. The stars reflect Pocock's brand, not necessarily the utility.

Founder
52/100 · skip

The buyer is an engineering manager or VP Eng pulling from a software tooling budget, and $500/mo is easy to expense — right up until legal or a senior engineer actually reviews what Devin merged and the audit process triples the cost in human review time. The moat claim is execution quality and the sandboxed parallel architecture, but neither of those is proprietary in a defensible way; the real moat would be workflow lock-in through deep Jira/Linear data, and they're not there yet. The existential stress-test: when Anthropic or OpenAI ship background coding agents natively at marginal cost, the pricing math collapses for a $500/mo wrapper — Cognition needs to be the place the model runs, not just the orchestration layer, and right now they're the orchestration layer.

No panel take
Futurist
75/100 · ship

The thesis Devin 2.0 is betting on is falsifiable and specific: within three years, the bottleneck in software delivery will be human task-switching overhead, not model capability, so parallelizing agent execution across sandboxed environments captures compounding throughput gains that sequential AI assistance cannot. The dependency that has to hold is that foundation models continue improving code reasoning faster than they improve cost, keeping per-task economics viable at scale. The second-order effect that nobody is talking about: if parallel autonomous agents become the unit of engineering throughput, the job of 'senior engineer' shifts from writing code to writing ticket specifications precise enough for agents to execute — that's a massive skills and tooling reshuffling, not just a productivity multiplier. Devin is early on this trend, not on-time, which means they capture the narrative but also absorb all the early-market trust failures before the workflow matures.

80/100 · ship

We're watching the emergence of a skills economy for AI agents. Pocock's repo is an early proof-of-concept that reusable, composable agent skills are a real category — the npm of agent methodology. Whoever wins this space wins a huge chunk of the developer toolchain.

Creator
No panel take
80/100 · ship

The /caveman ultra-compressed mode is genuinely clever for large codebases where token limits bite. As someone who spends half my life fighting context windows, the CONTEXT.md shared domain language approach deserves its own talk at every dev conference this year.

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