Compare/Skills (mattpocock) vs Mercury Coder Next Edit

AI tool comparison

Skills (mattpocock) vs Mercury Coder Next Edit

Which one should you ship with? Here is the side-by-side panel verdict, pricing read, reviewer split, and community vote comparison.

S

Developer Tools

Skills (mattpocock)

Real-world agent skills for engineers — install via npm, not vibes

Ship

75%

Panel ship

Community

Free

Entry

Skills is a curated library of AI agent prompts and workflows for real software engineering, created by TypeScript educator Matt Pocock. The project trended to 28,000 GitHub stars with its blunt tagline: "Agent skills for real engineers — not vibe coding." It's a deliberate pushback against chaos-first AI coding in favor of structured, methodical engineering. The library organizes into four categories: Planning & Design (to-prd for converting conversations into PRDs, grill-me for stress-testing plans), Development (tdd for test-driven AI assistance, triage-issue for bug investigation), Tooling & Setup (pre-commit hooks, git safety guards), and Writing & Knowledge (documentation utilities, Obsidian integration). Each skill installs with a single npx command — npx skills@latest add mattpocock/skills/tdd — and plugs into Claude agent setups. With 28,000 stars and 2,200 forks after trending on GitHub on April 27, 2026, Skills has clearly struck a nerve. It's as much a cultural statement as a product: AI coding tools should be used deliberately, with tests, with planning, and with guardrails. The TDD and triage-issue skills address real gaps in how current AI coding agents handle existing codebases rather than greenfield projects.

M

Coding Tools

Mercury Coder Next Edit

Sub-100ms next-edit prediction for VS Code and JetBrains — powered by diffusion LLMs

Mixed

50%

Panel ship

Community

Free

Entry

Inception Labs launched Next Edit inside the Continue extension, bringing Mercury Coder's diffusion-based architecture to VS Code and JetBrains. Unlike autoregressive autocomplete that generates left-to-right, Mercury predicts multi-line edits across your entire file simultaneously — deletions, additions, and structural changes at once. Common patterns it handles: converting callbacks to async/await, extracting functions, renaming variables across call sites, and squashing code smells. Latency is under 100ms so suggestions appear before you finish thinking. The diffusion architecture ($0.25/M input, $1/M output) is 5-10x faster than comparable autoregressive models. Available via Models Add-On in Continue.

Decision
Skills (mattpocock)
Mercury Coder Next Edit
Panel verdict
Ship · 3 ship / 1 skip
Mixed · 2 ship / 2 skip
Community
No community votes yet
No community votes yet
Pricing
Free / Open Source
Models Add-On subscription required for Continue. API: $0.25/M input tokens, $1/M output tokens. Free tier available.
Best for
Real-world agent skills for engineers — install via npm, not vibes
Sub-100ms next-edit prediction for VS Code and JetBrains — powered by diffusion LLMs
Category
Developer Tools
Coding Tools

Reviewer scorecard

Builder
80/100 · ship

The tdd skill alone is worth the install. Watching a Claude agent plan tests before writing implementation is exactly how I want AI to assist me. Matt's framing of 'real engineering vs. vibe coding' is the right cultural correction for 2026.

80/100 · ship

I've used next-edit features in other tools but the sub-100ms latency here is genuinely different — it's below my perception threshold, which means it doesn't break flow. The multi-line simultaneous edit understanding is real; it caught a refactor pattern I was about to manually do across 6 call sites.

Skeptic
45/100 · skip

These are sophisticated markdown prompts, not magic. If you're already a disciplined engineer, the skills add ceremony without much acceleration. The 28K stars partly reflect Matt's Twitter following — evaluate the actual skills before star-chasing.

45/100 · skip

The benchmarks are impressive but 'trained on real edit sequences' is doing a lot of work here. Until I see how it handles domain-specific refactors in large codebases with complex type hierarchies, I'm skeptical it beats Cursor's native next-edit on anything beyond textbook patterns.

Futurist
80/100 · ship

Community-curated skill libraries installed via package managers will become standard infrastructure — as natural as installing a linting config. Skills is the early prototype of a skills ecosystem that will matter at scale.

45/100 · hot

Diffusion LLMs applied to code editing is the most underrated architectural bet in AI tooling right now. Autoregressive generation was always the wrong primitive for editing — you don't write a diff token by token. Mercury's approach is structurally correct and the speed numbers suggest it scales without compromise.

Creator
80/100 · ship

The writing and knowledge skills are underrated. The article-editing and Obsidian integration skills bring structured AI assistance to documentation workflows that most agent tools ignore entirely. Install even if you're not primarily a developer.

80/100 · ship

Even for non-heavy-coders, the 'fix code smells' and 'rename across call sites' use cases are exactly the tedious tasks that make coding feel like work instead of creation. Sub-100ms means zero cognitive interrupt. This is the kind of AI assist that disappears into the background in a good way.

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