vs Superset

The Integrated Superset Alternative for Multi-Agent AI Coding

Superset is a great open-source orchestrator for running an army of agents across Git worktrees — but it's orchestration-first, macOS/Linux only, and sends you out to a separate IDE for editing and to other apps for API, database, and browser work. 1DevTool runs Claude Code, Codex CLI, and Gemini CLI in parallel worktrees too, then bundles a Monaco editor, HTTP client, 13-engine database client, embedded browser, and Docker — all wired into Send-to-AI, on macOS, Windows, and Linux.

Why Look for a Superset Alternative?

Orchestration-first, no built-in dev toolchain

Superset is excellent at launching and isolating agents, but for API debugging you still open Postman, for the database a separate client, and for visual QA a browser. 1DevTool bundles an HTTP client, a 13-engine database client, and an embedded browser in the same window — and pipes their output to agents with Send-to-AI.

Edits happen in an external IDE

Superset opens each worktree in VS Code, Cursor, or your terminal — the editing surface lives outside the app. 1DevTool ships the Monaco editor (the engine behind VS Code) with LSP, so you can read diffs, tweak code, and steer agents without leaving the workspace.

macOS / Linux only

Superset's desktop app currently targets macOS and Linux. 1DevTool runs natively on macOS, Windows, and Linux, so mixed-OS teams and Windows developers get the same multi-agent workspace.

No agent pipelines

Superset runs agents in parallel, but you wire up the hand-offs. 1DevTool adds Agent Pipelines that chain a planner → implementer → reviewer automatically, so multi-step work flows between agents without manual copy-paste.

No Send-to-AI across tools

Because Superset doesn't include an HTTP client, database client, or browser, there's nothing to push from them into an agent. 1DevTool's Send-to-AI turns a failing request, a query result, or a rendered page into agent context in one click.

Built for scale you may not need

Superset shines when you're running dozens to 100+ agents and managing cloud workspaces. If you mostly run a handful of agents and want them in one tool alongside your editor, API client, and database, 1DevTool's integrated workspace is a lighter fit.

1DevTool vs Superset Comparison

Feature1DevToolSuperset
Price$29 one-timeFree (open source)
Source modelProprietaryOpen source
AI cost modelBring your own API keys (no markup)Bring your own keys / agent plans
Parallel multi-agentGrid + pipelines10–100+ at scale
Agent-agnostic (any CLI agent)
Claude Code / Codex / Gemini Native
Git worktree isolation per agentCore model
Agent Pipelines (chained workflows)
Built-in Monaco editorOpens external IDE
Built-in HTTP Client
Built-in Database Client (13 engines)
Embedded Browser with DevTools
Docker Manager
Send-to-AI (browser, HTTP, DB → agent)
Persistent Terminal SessionsYes (tmux, survives restart)
Resume agent sessions from other apps
Cloud workspaces
Native mobile appPhone remote control
Local-first, no code telemetry
Account requiredFor cloud features
PlatformsmacOS, Windows, LinuxmacOS, Linux

Why Switch to 1DevTool?

  • Run the same parallel agents in Git worktrees — plus a built-in HTTP client, database client, and embedded browser
  • Edit inline with Monaco instead of opening a separate IDE per worktree
  • Send-to-AI pipes a request, query result, or page straight into an agent
  • Agent Pipelines chain planner → implementer → reviewer automatically
  • Runs on Windows too — not just macOS and Linux
  • Resume Claude/Codex/Gemini sessions started in any terminal, and switch agents per tab
  • Local-first and bring-your-own-key, just like Superset — your code and keys stay put
  • One-time $29 license for the whole integrated toolchain, not a stack of separate tools

Frequently Asked Questions

Is 1DevTool open source like Superset?

No — Superset is open source and free, while 1DevTool is a proprietary app with a one-time $29 license. What you get for that is an integrated workspace: parallel agents in Git worktrees plus a built-in Monaco editor, HTTP client, 13-engine database client, embedded browser, and Docker — tools Superset leaves to separate apps. Both are local-first and bring-your-own-key.

Does 1DevTool run agents in parallel Git worktrees like Superset?

Yes. 1DevTool launches Claude Code, Codex CLI, Gemini CLI, and any CLI agent in parallel, each in its own isolated Git worktree, so their changes never collide. It adds a multi-agent grid and Agent Pipelines that chain planner → implementer → reviewer automatically.

Can I use 1DevTool on Windows? Superset is macOS/Linux only.

Yes — 1DevTool runs natively on macOS, Windows, and Linux. Superset's desktop app currently targets macOS and Linux, so if you or your team are on Windows, 1DevTool gives you the same multi-agent workflow without switching OS.

What does 1DevTool add over Superset?

A full developer toolchain in the same window: a Monaco code editor, an HTTP/API client, a database client supporting 13 engines, an embedded browser with DevTools, and a Docker manager — all wired into Send-to-AI so you can push a request, query result, or page directly to an agent. Superset focuses on orchestrating agents and opening worktrees in your external IDE.

Does Superset have better scale than 1DevTool?

Superset is built to orchestrate dozens to 100+ agents and offers cloud workspaces and a native mobile app, so for very large fan-out it's purpose-built. 1DevTool focuses on running a handful of agents in parallel inside one integrated workspace with an editor, API client, database, and browser alongside them.

Can I use Superset and 1DevTool together?

Yes — they don't conflict. Both are local-first and use Git worktrees, so some developers orchestrate large agent fleets in Superset and switch to 1DevTool when they want inline editing, an HTTP/DB/browser toolchain, Send-to-AI, or Windows support. Files sync through the filesystem.

Ready to Try the Best Superset Alternative?

Join developers who switched to 1DevTool for multi-agent AI workflows.

Download 1DevTool — $29 One-Time