Compare/OpenMythos vs Qwen3-Coder-Next

AI tool comparison

OpenMythos vs Qwen3-Coder-Next

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

O

Models

OpenMythos

Open reconstruction of Claude Mythos using Recurrent-Depth Transformers

Mixed

50%

Panel ship

Community

Paid

Entry

OpenMythos is a community-driven theoretical reconstruction of Claude Mythos's suspected architecture, implementing a Recurrent-Depth Transformer (RDT) — a looped transformer that recycles layers multiple times per forward pass for deeper reasoning without massive parameter growth. The project drew 10,100 GitHub stars in its first week, reflecting intense developer curiosity about what's powering Anthropic's latest generation models. The architecture has three stages: a Prelude (initial layers), a Recurrent Block (looped up to 32 times with shared weights), and a Coda (final layers). Rather than stacking hundreds of unique layers, the recurrent block runs the same weights multiple times with learned injection parameters updating hidden states between loops — enabling implicit chain-of-thought reasoning in continuous latent space without generating intermediate tokens. The project supports Grouped Query Attention (GQA) with optional Flash Attention 2, Multi-Latent Attention (MLA), and sparse MoE with routed and shared experts. Model scales range from 1B to 1T parameters. The key claim is that RDT achieves reasoning depth comparable to fixed-depth models with far more parameters, since computational complexity scales with loop iterations rather than layer count. This would explain how Claude Mythos achieves strong reasoning performance without the extreme parameter counts of brute-force scaling — though Anthropic has neither confirmed nor denied the architecture.

Q

Open-Weight Models

Qwen3-Coder-Next

80B MoE coding agent, 3B active params, Apache 2.0, runs on consumer GPU

Ship

75%

Panel ship

Community

Free

Entry

Qwen3-Coder-Next is Alibaba Qwen team's open-weight coding agent model — 80B total parameters but only 3B active via a Mixture-of-Experts architecture, making it runnable on consumer hardware (quantized versions work on a $900 RX 7900 XTX GPU). It supports 256k context, integrates natively with Claude Code, Cline, and Cursor, and is Apache 2.0 licensed. The model was trained on 800,000 verifiable coding tasks mined from real GitHub PRs — not synthetic benchmarks — which contributes to its strong agentic coding performance. It scores 56.32% func-sec@1 on CWEval (security-focused coding eval), outperforming DeepSeek-V3.2, and is the top recommended local coding model per Latent.Space AINews as of April 2026. Available directly on Ollama. Qwen3-Coder-Next launched in February 2026 but is trending strongly on GitHub today, driven by fresh community benchmarks showing it holding its own against proprietary models on real-world coding tasks. For developers wanting a capable coding agent without API costs or data-sharing concerns, this is currently the best open-weights option.

Decision
OpenMythos
Qwen3-Coder-Next
Panel verdict
Mixed · 2 ship / 2 skip
Ship · 3 ship / 1 skip
Community
No community votes yet
No community votes yet
Pricing
Open Source
Free / open weights (Apache 2.0)
Best for
Open reconstruction of Claude Mythos using Recurrent-Depth Transformers
80B MoE coding agent, 3B active params, Apache 2.0, runs on consumer GPU
Category
Models
Open-Weight Models

Reviewer scorecard

Builder
80/100 · ship

The RDT architecture is backed by published research — this isn't pure speculation. The code is clean, the model configs cover 1B to 1T scales, and the Flash Attention 2 + MoE integration is production-quality. Even if the Mythos attribution is wrong, the architecture itself is worth experimenting with for inference-efficient reasoning.

80/100 · ship

A coding agent that runs locally on a consumer GPU, integrates with Claude Code and Cursor, and outperforms DeepSeek-V3.2 on security-focused coding evals — this is exactly what the ecosystem needed. Training on real GitHub PRs rather than synthetic data shows in the output quality. If you're not using this for local-first coding workflows, you're paying API costs you don't need to.

Skeptic
45/100 · skip

This is fundamentally speculative — Anthropic has said nothing about Mythos's architecture, and the RDT attribution is community inference. Shipping models based on 'theoretical reconstructions' of closed-source systems is a recipe for building on a false premise. Interesting for research, but don't bet production systems on it.

45/100 · skip

56.32% on CWEval is good but not 'beats Claude' good — that framing in the community is overselling it. It's best-in-class for *open weights*, which is a narrower claim. And 'Alibaba open source' carries real enterprise risk: Apache 2.0 today doesn't mean the weights stay available or the license doesn't change. DeepSeek's previous license complications are a useful cautionary tale.

Futurist
80/100 · ship

Whether or not OpenMythos accurately mirrors Claude's internals, the underlying RDT architecture is genuinely compelling for reasoning-heavy tasks. The community reverse-engineering of frontier model architectures is a powerful forcing function — it accelerates open-source capability even when the attribution turns out to be wrong.

80/100 · ship

The fact that you can run a capable coding agent on $900 of consumer hardware — on an open-weights model with no API dependency — is a structural shift in who has access to AI-assisted development. Open-source coding agents at this capability level make serious software development accessible to the long tail of developers globally, not just those with budget for proprietary APIs.

Creator
45/100 · skip

Unless you're a researcher actively training models, OpenMythos is theoretical infrastructure without immediate creative application. Follow the project for when pre-trained checkpoints ship — that's when it becomes practically useful for creative workflows.

80/100 · ship

For prototyping and building tools where I don't want my code leaving my machine, this is now my default. The Claude Code integration means I don't have to change my workflow — just swap the backend model. Apache 2.0 means I can actually build products on top of it without legal ambiguity. Strongly recommend.

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