Compare/Needle vs OpenCode

AI tool comparison

Needle vs OpenCode

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

N

Developer Tools

Needle

A 26M-param model that routes tool calls on phones and watches

Ship

75%

Panel ship

Community

Paid

Entry

Needle is a tiny 26-million-parameter language model built specifically for function calling—the task of deciding which tool to invoke based on a user's natural language request. Developed by Cactus-Compute and released under MIT, it was pretrained on 200 billion tokens using 16 TPU v6e chips, then post-trained on 2 billion curated function-call examples distilled from Google's Gemini 3.1. The result: a model small enough to run on a phone or smartwatch that can reliably pick the right tool with sub-100ms latency. The architecture is called a "Simple Attention Network" and deliberately strips away generative capabilities, focusing entirely on routing accuracy. You hand Needle a list of available tools and a user query, and it outputs a structured JSON function call—nothing more. This keeps the binary tiny, the inference fast, and the memory footprint under control on edge hardware. Why does this matter? Today's personal AI assistants require a round-trip to the cloud for every tool dispatch, adding latency and raising privacy concerns. Needle makes it possible to keep that decision-making on-device, calling the cloud only when the tool itself requires it. It's early (258 GitHub stars today, trending hard), but the idea of a dedicated tiny router model is compelling enough that several phone OEMs are reportedly experimenting with it.

O

Developer Tools

OpenCode

Privacy-first terminal coding agent — 75+ models, zero data retention

Ship

100%

Panel ship

Community

Free

Entry

OpenCode is an open-source, terminal-native AI coding agent from Anomaly Innovations that works with 75+ AI models and stores none of your code. Built in Go with a Bubble Tea TUI, it runs a client/server architecture locally — the backend handles AI model communication and tool execution against a local SQLite database, while the frontend can be the terminal TUI, a desktop app, or an IDE extension. You bring your own API keys from Anthropic, OpenAI, Google, or any OpenRouter-compatible provider and pay those providers directly — there's no subscription, no account, and no telemetry. Two built-in agents cover the main workflow split: Build (full-access for active development) and Plan (read-only for exploration and analysis), switchable with Tab. LSP integration, vim-like editing, persistent multi-session storage, and tool execution that lets the AI modify code and run commands round out the feature set. With 143,000+ GitHub stars accumulated in under a year, OpenCode has emerged as the leading open alternative to Claude Code and GitHub Copilot for developers who prioritize code privacy and vendor independence. It's particularly compelling for teams working on proprietary codebases in regulated industries where sending code to an external service is a non-starter.

Decision
Needle
OpenCode
Panel verdict
Ship · 3 ship / 1 skip
Ship · 4 ship / 0 skip
Community
No community votes yet
No community votes yet
Pricing
Open Source (MIT)
Free / Open Source (MIT) — BYOK
Best for
A 26M-param model that routes tool calls on phones and watches
Privacy-first terminal coding agent — 75+ models, zero data retention
Category
Developer Tools
Developer Tools

Reviewer scorecard

Builder
80/100 · ship

If you're building any kind of personal agent or on-device assistant, Needle solves the tool-routing problem cleanly. The MIT license and Hugging Face weights make integration straightforward—drop it in, point it at your tool list, done.

80/100 · ship

The primitive is clean: a local client/server AI coding agent where the server handles tool execution and model I/O against SQLite, and the frontend is swappable — TUI today, IDE extension tomorrow. The DX bet is that developers would rather manage their own API keys than pay a subscription tax, and that bet is correct for anyone who has ever watched Claude Code quietly bill $40 in an afternoon. The moment of truth is `opencode` in a terminal, Tab to switch between Build and Plan agents, and LSP-backed edits that actually know your project structure — it survives that test, and the Go binary means it starts fast and stays fast. The Build/Plan split is the specific technical decision that earned the ship: it's the right primitive for separating 'I want to understand this codebase' from 'I want to change it,' and it would have taken real thought to get that separation right without making it clunky.

Skeptic
45/100 · skip

258 stars and 8 forks isn't exactly a battle-tested library. It's a research preview that hasn't been stress-tested on diverse real-world tool schemas. Wait for benchmarks from third parties before trusting this in production.

80/100 · ship

Category is local AI coding agents; direct competitors are Claude Code, Aider, and Continue.dev — and OpenCode beats all three on the specific axis of 'zero code egress with model flexibility,' which is a real constraint, not a vibe. The scenario where it breaks is a developer on a Windows machine with no terminal fluency who needs inline diffs in VS Code — the TUI-first model will lose that user to a Copilot extension every time, and the IDE extension is listed as a frontend option but not a shipped reality as of review. The thing that kills it in 12 months is Anthropic shipping Claude Code as a self-hostable binary, which removes the privacy moat for the Anthropic-key users who are currently the majority of the audience — but the 75-model support and open-source composability give it a real survival path even then.

Futurist
80/100 · ship

Dedicated micro-models for specific reasoning subtasks is the architecture path forward. Needle hints at a future where your device runs a dozen tiny specialists rather than one giant generalist—dramatically better for privacy, latency, and battery life.

80/100 · ship

The thesis is falsifiable: by 2028, AI coding agents will be infrastructure-level commodities, and the teams that win will be those who own the execution layer locally — because model costs drop to noise but data sovereignty regulations tighten, especially in EU, healthcare, and defense. OpenCode is early on the local-execution trend line, not on-time, which is where you want to be; the second-order effect is that when enterprises adopt it, they start treating the AI model as a pluggable dependency rather than a vendor relationship, which structurally shifts negotiating power away from Anthropic and OpenAI and toward whoever controls the agent runtime. The dependency that has to hold: model API standardization continues rather than fracturing into incompatible proprietary protocols — if OpenAI and Anthropic diverge sharply on function-calling schemas, the 75-model promise gets expensive to maintain and the abstraction layer becomes the product's biggest liability.

Creator
80/100 · ship

The idea of AI assistants on wearables that actually respond instantly instead of spinning for 3 seconds on every request is genuinely exciting for creative workflows—imagine voice-triggering design tools from your watch without a cloud hop.

No panel take
Founder
No panel take
80/100 · ship

The buyer here is the engineering lead at a Series B fintech or healthcare startup who has been told by legal that production code cannot touch an external API — that is a real budget line and a real buyer, and OpenCode is the first open-source tool positioned cleanly for it. There is no direct revenue, which is fine: the moat is not the business model but the community flywheel — 143K GitHub stars in under a year means contributors and integrations compound in ways that a VC-funded closed competitor cannot easily replicate. The existential risk is not commoditization but abandonment — Anomaly Innovations needs to show a credible sustainability story, because open-source AI tooling graveyards are full of well-starred repos whose maintainers burned out six months after the HN launch.

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