AI tool comparison
DOOM MCP vs Optio
Which one should you ship with? Here is the side-by-side panel verdict, pricing read, reviewer split, and community vote comparison.
Developer Tools
DOOM MCP
Play DOOM inline inside Claude or ChatGPT — full game, no browser needed
75%
Panel ship
—
Community
Free
Entry
Chris Nager built a fully playable DOOM that runs as an MCP (Model Context Protocol) app, rendering inline inside Claude and ChatGPT without a separate browser tab. The architecture uses two MCP tools — create_doom_session for inline-capable hosts and get_doom_launch_url as a browser fallback — combined with cloudflare/doom-wasm for the game runtime and a signed token system that maintains session state across both surfaces. The result is the same session whether you're playing inline or in a tab. The key technical challenge was avoiding iframe and CSP (Content Security Policy) issues. Rather than embedding a browser page inside the MCP iframe, the DOOM canvas runs directly inside the host's iframe — a subtle but critical distinction that resolved a class of rendering and input-handling bugs. The final implementation is intentionally stripped down: no save/load, no persistence adapters, just stable playable DOOM. Beyond the novelty, this project is a concrete demonstration that MCP apps are interactive surfaces, not just tool-calling JSON endpoints. The progressive enhancement pattern — same signed-token foundation serving both inline and browser modes — is a reusable architecture for any game or interactive experience that wants to live inside an AI assistant. Nager open-sourced the implementation and the blog post is a detailed technical breakdown.
Developer Tools
Optio
Orchestrate AI coding agents in Kubernetes from ticket to PR
67%
Panel ship
—
Community
Free
Entry
Optio orchestrates AI coding agents inside Kubernetes pods, turning issue tickets into pull requests automatically. It handles sandboxing, resource allocation, and PR creation. Each agent runs in an isolated container with access to the repo and tools it needs.
Reviewer scorecard
“The signed-token progressive enhancement pattern is the part worth stealing. This is a clean reference architecture for MCP interactive apps, and DOOM just happens to be the demo case.”
“K8s-native agent orchestration is the right call — you get isolation, resource limits, and scaling for free. The ticket-to-PR pipeline is well-designed. My concern is the K8s prerequisite excludes most small teams, but if you already run K8s this slots right in.”
“Fun proof of concept but let's be honest: if your AI assistant is hosting a DOOM session, something has gone wrong with your productivity. The MCP-as-interactive-surface insight is real, but this specific app has no utility.”
“Another "agents write your PRs" tool. The K8s orchestration is genuinely well-built, but the end-to-end success rate on non-trivial tickets is still low across all tools in this category. You will spend more time reviewing bad PRs than writing the code yourself.”
“Every major compute platform's pivot point is when it runs DOOM. MCP running DOOM means MCP is a real platform now. The implications for interactive AI-embedded experiences are significant.”
“The future of software engineering is humans writing tickets and agents writing code. Optio is early but the architecture — isolated K8s pods per task, parallel agent execution, automatic PR creation — is exactly what the agent-native CI/CD pipeline looks like.”
“As someone who thinks about interactive experiences, the idea of game-like UI living inside an AI context is genuinely exciting. This is a crude ancestor of what interactive AI-native media could become.”
Weekly AI Tool Verdicts
Get the next comparison in your inbox
New AI tools ship daily. We compare them before you waste an afternoon.