AI tool comparison
Cursor 3 vs Multica
Which one should you ship with? Here is the side-by-side panel verdict, pricing read, reviewer split, and community vote comparison.
Developer Tools
Cursor 3
Cursor evolves from AI IDE to multi-agent coordination platform
75%
Panel ship
—
Community
Free
Entry
Cursor 3 is a major version release that transforms the AI coding editor into a full agent coordination platform. The headline feature is a unified workspace: every agent session — whether triggered from mobile, web, Slack, GitHub, Linear, or locally — appears in a single sidebar. You can see all running agents, their current state, and switch between local and cloud execution seamlessly. The release also introduces a marketplace for agent plugins and MCP (Model Context Protocol) servers, enabling a third-party ecosystem of specialized tools that agents can discover and use. The PR and diff interface has been completely redesigned for multi-agent workflows, with visual conflict resolution when multiple agents modify related code. Cursor has been on a remarkable trajectory — from a VS Code fork to the dominant AI IDE to now positioning as an agent orchestration layer. Cursor 3 is the clearest statement yet that the endgame isn't a better text editor; it's a platform where humans and AI agents collaborate on software production at scale.
Developer Tools
Multica
Assign tasks to AI coding agents like a human team member
75%
Panel ship
—
Community
Free
Entry
Multica is an open-source platform that brings AI coding agents into the same task management UX as human teammates — a Kanban-style task board where you assign, track, and review agent work in real time via WebSocket. It supports Claude Code, Codex, Gemini, Hermes, and others from a single dashboard, routing tasks to the appropriate agent based on capability profiles. The distinguishing feature is skill compounding: when an agent solves a problem, that solution gets extracted into a reusable playbook that becomes available to all agents on future tasks. Over time, the system accumulates institutional knowledge that makes subsequent tasks faster and cheaper. Agents report progress live, flag blockers, and submit pull requests for review through the same interface. Multica targets the 'how do I scale AI agents across a team' problem — moving beyond a single developer's Claude Code session to a shared, persistent agent infrastructure that multiple team members can assign to and monitor simultaneously.
Reviewer scorecard
“The unified agent session sidebar alone justifies the upgrade. I had three parallel agents running — one on tests, one on docs, one on a new feature — all visible and manageable from one interface. The MCP marketplace is early but the architecture is right. Ship.”
“The skill compounding model is the right answer to the 'why does the agent keep forgetting how we do X' problem. Extracting solutions into reusable playbooks means the system gets smarter about your codebase over time rather than starting cold every session. Multi-agent support with a single task board is what engineering managers actually need to deploy this in a team context.”
“Cursor keeps adding layers of complexity that raise the subscription ceiling without meaningfully improving the core coding experience for most developers. The $200/mo Ultra tier is real money, and the marketplace creates a fragmented dependency tree. This is a power-user upgrade, not a universal one.”
“Playbook compounding sounds great until an agent learns a bad pattern and propagates it across all future tasks. The 'assign tasks like a human' metaphor breaks down fast when agents need clarification, get stuck on ambiguous requirements, or produce subtly wrong code that passes tests but fails in production. This needs robust human review workflows or it ships bugs at scale.”
“Cursor 3 is building the operating system for software development. When every trigger source — Slack message, GitHub issue, Linear ticket — can spin up a coordinated agent team and you manage them from one place, we've crossed into a new paradigm for how software gets made.”
“Shared institutional memory across an AI agent fleet is a prerequisite for AI to function as a genuine team member rather than a stateless tool. Multica's playbook model is an early prototype of what will eventually be per-org agent knowledge graphs. The companies that get this right will have AI that understands their specific codebase, patterns, and conventions.”
“Managing agent sessions from mobile is genuinely useful — I can kick off a design system refactor before bed and review the diff in the morning. The redesigned PR interface makes agent-generated code much easier to review visually. Strong upgrade.”
“Seeing agent progress live on a task board removes the black-box anxiety that makes non-engineers reluctant to trust AI coding tools. When a designer can see that the 'add animation to the hero section' task is 80% complete and waiting for an asset path, that's a workflow that actually integrates with how product teams operate — not just developers.”
Weekly AI Tool Verdicts
Get the next comparison in your inbox
New AI tools ship daily. We compare them before you waste an afternoon.