AI tool comparison
Google ADK Python 1.0 vs v0 3.0
Which one should you ship with? Here is the side-by-side panel verdict, pricing read, reviewer split, and community vote comparison.
Developer Tools
Google ADK Python 1.0
Google's production-ready framework for building AI agents
75%
Panel ship
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Community
Free
Entry
Google's Agent Development Kit (ADK) Python hit v1.0.0 stable on April 17, marking it production-ready for teams building and deploying AI agents at scale. ADK is a modular, code-first framework that applies standard software engineering principles to agent development — graph-based workflow execution, structured agent-to-agent delegation via a Task API, native MCP support for tool integration, and built-in evaluation tooling. Unlike LangChain's general-purpose orchestration or CrewAI's role-based crews, ADK leans into composable determinism: you define explicit graphs of agent behavior that are auditable, testable, and deployable directly to Google Cloud's Vertex AI Agent Engine. It supports Python, TypeScript, Go, and Java, making it one of the few multi-language agent frameworks in production. The 1.0 stable label matters. Google has been iterating ADK roughly every two weeks, and teams that held off on building with it due to API instability now have a stable target. With Vertex AI providing the deployment layer and Agent Engine handling orchestration at scale, this is Google's full-stack answer to the agent infrastructure question.
Developer Tools
v0 3.0
From prompt to full-stack app — with backend routes and live database
100%
Panel ship
—
Community
Free
Entry
v0 3.0 expands Vercel's AI-powered UI generator into a full-stack scaffolding tool, capable of generating backend API routes and database schemas alongside frontend components. A native Supabase integration enables one-click database provisioning directly from a generated project. The tool targets developers who want to go from prompt to deployable application without manually wiring frontend, backend, and database layers.
Reviewer scorecard
“The 1.0 stable tag finally gives us something to build on. The graph-based execution engine is exactly what I want for deterministic multi-step pipelines where I can't afford unpredictable LLM routing. Native MCP support means my existing tool ecosystem plugs straight in without adapter layers.”
“The primitive here is prompt-to-deployable-scaffold: v0 3.0 generates Next.js pages, API route handlers, and Supabase schema SQL in a single pass. The DX bet is that the complexity of wiring three layers together belongs at generation time, not at configuration time — and that's the right call. The moment of truth is whether the generated schema and the generated API routes actually agree on types and column names without you having to play referee, and in my testing they mostly do. The Supabase one-click provisioning is genuinely not a weekend script replacement — threading OAuth, environment variable injection, and migration execution into a deploy pipeline is real work. The specific technical decision that earns the ship: generated code is readable, uses typed Supabase client idioms correctly, and doesn't wrap everything in a proprietary abstraction you can't eject from.”
“ADK's tight coupling to Vertex AI is a genuine lock-in concern. The 'production-ready' badge comes with an implicit 'on Google Cloud' qualifier. For teams running on AWS or Azure, the deployment story is clunky. LangGraph and CrewAI are more cloud-agnostic and have larger community ecosystems right now.”
“The direct competitor is Bolt.new — same prompt-to-full-stack pitch, similar Supabase tie-in, launched earlier. v0 3.0 wins on one axis: the Vercel deploy path is genuinely faster and the generated Next.js code is higher quality than what Bolt produces at equivalent prompts. Where this breaks is at the second feature: once your generated app needs auth with row-level security, multi-tenant logic, or anything beyond a simple CRUD schema, the generated output becomes a starting point you have to heavily rewrite, not a finish line. What kills this in 12 months isn't a competitor — it's Vercel itself shipping a smarter agent that handles iteration, not just generation, at which point v0 3.0 looks like a transitional product. What would make me wrong: if the team ships diff-aware regeneration that can surgically update an existing codebase without blowing away your changes.”
“Google going stable on a multi-language agent framework signals they're treating this as core infrastructure, not a demo. The Agent-to-Agent (A2A) protocol work alongside ADK hints at Google's real play: defining how agents communicate at internet scale, the same way HTTP defined how documents communicate.”
“For no-code and low-code builders who want to graduate to real agent workflows, ADK's structured graph model is more approachable than writing raw LangChain chains. The TypeScript version in particular opens this to a much wider pool of front-end developers who want to add agentic features to their apps.”
“The buyer here is the solo developer or small team who would otherwise spend a week scaffolding before writing a line of product logic — they're paying from their own card or a startup tools budget, not an IT procurement process. The pricing architecture makes sense: the free tier is a genuine acquisition funnel, and the Team tier converts when the generated app gets deployed and the team needs deployment credits alongside generation credits — natural expansion revenue baked into one bill. The moat is distribution: Vercel already owns the deploy target, so every generated app that goes live is a Vercel project, compounding usage. What survives a 10x cheaper model is exactly that distribution lock — the generation commodity collapses, but the deploy relationship holds. The specific business decision that makes this viable is bundling generation credits and compute credits under one roof so customers never have to think about which vendor to pay.”
“The job-to-be-done is narrow and correct: scaffold a working full-stack app fast enough that the user's first deploy happens before motivation runs out. Onboarding survives the two-minute test — type a prompt, see generated code, click deploy, Supabase connection gets provisioned automatically — there are zero configuration screens between prompt and live URL if you let the defaults run. The completeness gap is real though: the tool gets you to a deployed scaffold but the editing story is still weak. Iterating on an existing generated project requires either regenerating the whole thing or switching to your local editor, which means dual-wielding with Cursor or Windsurf the moment your app grows past a toy. The specific product decision that earns the ship anyway: the opinionated defaults — Next.js App Router, Supabase, Tailwind — are the right defaults for 80% of the target user, and not deferring those choices to the user is why the first deploy actually happens.”
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