AI tool comparison
MDArena vs Terrarium
Which one should you ship with? Here is the side-by-side panel verdict, pricing read, reviewer split, and community vote comparison.
Developer Tools
MDArena
Benchmark your CLAUDE.md files against real PRs to see if they actually help
50%
Panel ship
—
Community
Free
Entry
MDArena is an open-source benchmarking tool that answers a question every Claude Code user eventually asks: do my CLAUDE.md context files actually improve agent performance, or am I just adding tokens? It mines merged PRs from your repository, strips or injects context files, runs your actual test suite, and measures success rates with statistical significance tests. The methodology mirrors SWE-bench: use `git archive` to create history-free checkpoints so agents can't peek at future commits, detect test commands from CI/CD configs automatically, and run paired t-tests to determine whether differences are real or noise. The project was motivated by academic research showing many CLAUDE.md files reduce agent success rates by 20% while consuming more tokens. For any team investing heavily in Claude Code infrastructure, MDArena provides empirical feedback that most developers currently lack. It's a small, focused tool that solves an annoying but real problem in the emerging AI coding workflow.
Developer Tools
Terrarium
Evals that actually simulate real deployment — stateful, multi-turn, alive
50%
Panel ship
—
Community
Paid
Entry
Terrarium is a multi-turn evaluation and optimization engine for LLM agents built by evolvent-ai. Unlike static benchmark suites that measure agents against fixed input-output pairs, Terrarium creates persistent, stateful "living environments" — simulated deployment contexts where agents operate over extended sessions, accumulate state, use tools, and interact with simulated external systems. You evaluate agents the way you'd test a car: by driving it, not by measuring its doors. The system supports configurable environment complexity, including simulated databases, APIs, file systems, and user personas. Agents are scored not just on final outputs but on trajectory quality — how efficiently they reached the answer, how often they hallucinated intermediate steps, and how well they recovered from dead ends. The engine also supports continuous optimization loops where poor-performing trajectories trigger automatic prompt refinement. With 17 stars and created April 14, Terrarium is extremely new. But it's addressing a genuine gap: the disconnect between how agents perform on static benchmarks versus how they behave in production. As enterprise AI deployments scale, the need for realistic pre-production evaluation is becoming critical.
Reviewer scorecard
“I've spent real time crafting CLAUDE.md files with no way to know if they help. A tool that uses my actual test suite against real PRs to measure context file effectiveness is exactly the feedback loop I've been missing. The `git archive` anti-cheat approach shows this was built by someone who's thought carefully about methodology.”
“Static evals are lying to us constantly — agents that ace benchmarks fall apart in production because benchmarks don't have state, side effects, or accumulated context. Terrarium's living environments model is the right approach to catching real failure modes before deployment.”
“Benchmarking on merged PRs is circular — the agent is being tested on tasks that were already solved by humans, which may not reflect the actual distribution of tasks you need it for. Statistical significance from your codebase's PR history also doesn't generalize: what works in one repo will vary wildly in another. Interesting research tool, limited practical signal.”
“Building a realistic simulation of your production environment is often harder than just running the agent in staging. The value proposition assumes your eval environment is meaningfully closer to production than your existing test suite — which is a big assumption for complex deployments.”
“Context engineering is becoming a real discipline as AI coding agents proliferate, and right now it's entirely vibes-based. MDArena represents the first step toward empirical context optimization — within two years, running something like this before shipping an agent configuration will be standard practice.”
“The eval-optimize loop is the missing piece in most AI agent development workflows. Tools that can automatically identify weak trajectories and suggest improvements will become as fundamental as unit tests. Terrarium is early, but the category is inevitable.”
“The audience here is squarely developer teams with established test suites and PR histories — not a tool for creators or smaller codebases without CI/CD. The value proposition is real, but only lands for teams already deep in Claude Code infrastructure.”
“This is deeply technical infrastructure that won't affect my daily workflow. The people who need this know they need it — but for most creators building with AI tools, static evals are already more than they use.”
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