The dev tool reviews you wish existed
I am building a review site for developer tools that does the homework most "Top 10" articles skip: two tools, two weeks of real production use on the same task, then an honest verdict. Launching soon. The first comparison is in progress. Subscribe below to get it on the day it goes live.

What will make CompareDev different
Not another listicle farm
The web is drowning in 'Top 10 AI Tools 2026' posts written in 20 minutes by someone who has never opened them. CompareDev is built to be the opposite of that.
Real production use
Every tool will get a minimum of two weeks shipping actual code in real projects before any verdict goes up.
Side-by-side, same task
Tools will be tested on the same prompts, repos, and bugs — so you see exactly where one wins and the other loses.
Numbers, not adjectives
Latency, token cost, completion accuracy, screenshots of bad output. Receipts, not vibes.
Updated, not abandoned
Tools change fast. Each review will carry a "Last updated" date and will be revised when the products change materially.
Affiliate disclosed
When affiliate programs become active, every commission link will be flagged and listed on the disclosure page. The presence of an affiliate program will never change a verdict.
Made for devs
No popup walls. No "subscribe for the answer." Markdown, code blocks, and the answer you came for.
Who is behind this
Written by someone who actually ships
Experience-first reviews
Google calls this signal "Experience" under E-E-A-T. I call it doing the homework.10 years full-stack
Java/Spring, React, Node — production work across startups and enterprise.
Day-job + side projects
I use AI coding tools daily in real codebases. The reviews here will reflect what I learn, not what the marketing pages promise.
Independent
No agency. No PR pitches. The roadmap is shaped by what I would buy next, not who pays best.
How a CompareDev review will be made
Step 1: Pick a real project
No toy "todo apps." Each review starts with something I actually need to ship — a feature, a refactor, a migration.
Step 2: Two weeks, both tools
The same task, both tools, alternated. A daily log records what worked, what failed, what cost what.
Step 3: Numbers + screenshots
Completions counted, latency measured, mistakes screenshotted. The receipts go in the post.
Step 4: Verdict + "Best for" labels
No single winner. Each review tells you which tool fits which kind of developer — solo, team, budget, enterprise.

Categories
Planned review categories
Categories where buying the wrong tool wastes weeks. The first batch of reviews will cover AI coding assistants; the rest follow as time allows.
Cursor, Claude Code, GitHub Copilot, Windsurf, Continue. The category that has changed everything in two years.
VS Code vs Cursor vs Zed. When a config-heavy Neovim setup pays off vs when it just costs time.
Supabase vs Firebase. Neon vs PlanetScale. The choices that lock you in for years — picked wrong, expensive.
Webflow vs Framer. When code wins, when no-code does, and how to migrate without rewriting from scratch.
Notion vs Obsidian for engineering docs. Linear vs Jira for sprints. Tools the team will actually use.
Kit vs Beehiiv vs Substack for technical writers. Where the analytics matter, where deliverability does.
FAQ
Frequently Asked Questions
Honest answers about how this site will work.
Are there any reviews live right now?
Not yet. CompareDev is in the launch phase. The first comparison is in progress. Subscribe below and you will get it the day it goes live — no spam in the meantime.
Will affiliate links change your recommendations?
No. The verdict in every review will come from real testing, not commission rates. As of today, no affiliate partnership has been approved — see the disclosure page for the current status. When partnerships become active, they will be listed on that page.
How will this be different from every other "Top 10 dev tools" post?
Most of those are AI-written summaries of the tool's own marketing page. CompareDev refuses to publish anything that has not been personally used for at least 14 days on real production code. That is the whole differentiator.
How often will reviews ship?
Each review takes at least two weeks of testing plus writing time, so the realistic cadence is roughly one review per month at first, with updates to existing reviews in between. Quality before frequency.
Can I request a comparison?
Yes. Use the contact form. Requests that come up multiple times will jump the queue once an audience exists.
Who writes these?
One person — Leonan, a full-stack developer with 10 years of experience. There is no editorial team and no ghostwriters. Every review will carry the byline at the top.
Get the first review the day it ships
Until the proper newsletter form goes live, the launch list is run by email. Click below and your address goes on the notify list — only used to send the launch announcement. No spam, no list-sharing.