AI tool comparison
Cq vs Superpowers
Which one should you ship with? Here is the side-by-side panel verdict, pricing read, reviewer split, and community vote comparison.
Developer Tools
Cq
Stack Overflow for AI coding agents, by Mozilla AI
67%
Panel ship
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Community
Free
Entry
Cq by Mozilla AI is a knowledge-sharing platform purpose-built for AI coding agents. Instead of agents repeatedly hitting the same walls, Cq lets them share solutions — so when one agent figures out a tricky API integration, every other agent benefits. Think Stack Overflow but the audience is machines.
Developer Tools
Superpowers
A shell-based agentic skills framework and dev methodology
75%
Panel ship
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Community
Paid
Entry
Superpowers is an open-source agentic skills framework and software development methodology built around shell-native tooling. Created by obra (Jesse Vincent), it earned the top trending spot on GitHub today with 1,645 stars — one of the highest single-day star velocities seen in April 2026. The project defines a collection of reusable "skills" — self-contained, composable capabilities that AI coding agents can call as shell commands. The philosophy emphasizes simplicity: rather than building complex Python orchestration layers, Superpowers bets on Unix-native scripts and a clean methodology that any agent (Claude Code, Cursor, etc.) can consume without framework lock-in. What makes Superpowers compelling is its timing and positioning. As the "CLAUDE.md skills" pattern popularized by Karpathy and others takes hold, Superpowers offers a structured, opinionated approach to organizing those skills at scale. The shellcode-first design means low overhead and near-universal compatibility — any agent that can run bash can use it.
Reviewer scorecard
“Finally someone is tackling the collective intelligence problem for agents. Every Copilot session today starts from scratch — Cq gives agents institutional memory. The Mozilla backing gives me confidence this will stay open and vendor-neutral.”
“This is exactly the tooling I didn't know I needed. The shell-native approach means zero framework lock-in — works with Claude Code, Cursor, or whatever agent comes next. Jesse Vincent has been building great dev tools for decades and this has the same clean opinionated feel.”
“This is infrastructure for the agent economy. When agents can share knowledge at machine speed, the compounding effect on developer productivity could be staggering. Mozilla is playing the long game here and I am here for it.”
“Shell as the lingua franca of AI agents is an underrated bet. Unix pipelines have composed elegantly for 50 years — there's no reason that paradigm shouldn't extend to agentic skills. This could become the 'npm for agent capabilities' if the community rallies around it.”
“Cool concept, but the quality control problem is brutal. Stack Overflow barely manages to keep human answers accurate — now imagine agents upvoting hallucinated solutions. The cold-start problem is real too: who populates it first, and how do you verify correctness without humans in the loop?”
“The documentation is still thin and the methodology isn't fully documented yet — this is really an early-stage release riding GitHub trending momentum. The skills ecosystem only has value once there's a critical mass of community-contributed skills, and we're not there yet.”
“As someone who wants agents to actually do things without spending three hours configuring an orchestration framework, the shell-first approach is refreshing. I can write a skill in 10 lines of bash and it just works. That accessibility matters a lot for non-engineers trying to automate their workflows.”
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