AI tool comparison
Electron vs Goose
Which one should you ship with? Here is the side-by-side panel verdict, pricing read, reviewer split, and community vote comparison.
Developer Tools
Electron
Build cross-platform desktop apps with web technologies
33%
Panel ship
—
Community
Free
Entry
Electron packages web apps as native desktop applications. Powers VS Code, Slack, Discord, and hundreds of other desktop apps. Criticized for memory usage.
Developer Tools
Goose
Local-first open source AI agent with 70+ MCP extensions
75%
Panel ship
—
Community
Free
Entry
Goose is a general-purpose AI agent that runs entirely on your machine — no mandatory cloud, no vendor lock-in. Built in Rust by Block (the company behind Square and Cash App), it ships as a desktop app, CLI, and API that can write code, execute commands, browse the web, manage files, and automate workflows using natural language. Goose was one of the earliest adopters of the Model Context Protocol (MCP) and now supports 70+ documented extensions ranging from GitHub integration and database access to browser control and custom toolchains. It works with 15+ LLM providers — Anthropic, OpenAI, Google, Ollama, OpenRouter, and more — so you can run it fully offline with a local model or hook it into a frontier API. The project has now moved under the Linux Foundation's newly formed Agentic AI Foundation (AAIF), putting it alongside MCP and AGENTS.md under vendor-neutral governance. With 38k+ GitHub stars and 400+ contributors, Goose is quietly becoming the go-to open-source agent for engineers who don't want to compromise on privacy or flexibility.
Reviewer scorecard
“Ship desktop apps with your web stack. VS Code proves Electron apps can be fast with the right engineering.”
“70+ MCP extensions and full offline support means you can actually customize this for real workflows. The YAML recipe system for portable automation is underrated — this is what an agent framework should look like.”
“Memory hog that bundles a full Chrome instance. Tauri is the modern alternative with 10x smaller bundles.”
“Moving to the Linux Foundation sounds great until you realize it adds governance overhead and slows iteration. With Cursor, Windsurf, and Claude Code all competing here, Goose needs a killer differentiator beyond 'open source' to stay relevant.”
“Tauri and native solutions are the future for desktop apps. Electron was necessary but its era is ending.”
“The AAIF move is huge — MCP, Goose, and AGENTS.md under one neutral roof creates a real open standard stack for agentic AI. This is the Linux of agent frameworks, and the network effects are just beginning.”
“Finally an agent that respects your privacy enough to run locally without phoning home. For creators handling sensitive client work, the offline-first model is a genuine selling point no SaaS tool can match.”
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