Show HN: The independent guide to agent orchestrators
agentmgmt.devHey HN!
I built AgentMGMT.dev today to keep track of all those agent orchestration tools that keep popping up. I've tried a few and landed on Superset, which I'm extremely happy (and productive!) with - but I think this category of tools will be extremely important and interesting in the next couple years, so it's worth keeping an eye on all available tools and how they evolve.
I will keep the site up-to-date, please help me by submitting new tools that are not yet in the list, or add any details that might help folks who are out shopping for their first/next agent orchestrator!
Good list, but gosh the term "agent orchestrator" is really being diluted endlessly these days.
Also, putting Zed and Cursor in the same "freemium" bucket is really unfair. You can use the former as much as you want with your own AI subscription (e.g. Claude Code) without paying Zed a cent. You have to pay the latter for anything more than a pitiful amount of AI usage.
Thanks for the feedback!
> Good list, but gosh the term "agent orchestrator" is really being diluted endlessly these days.
Yeah, there's a lot happening in this space... but I think those 13 tools which are one the list right now all try to do the same thing - make it easier to run multiple agents (mostly over multiple apps) at the same time. Are there any tools you would add or remove?
> Also, putting Zed and Cursor in the same "freemium" bucket is really unfair...
Sure, the "free" plans of some of the tools are not really comparable, but I think that's out of scope for this list. :)
I added a comment to Cursor in the list. ;)
Guide? This is a table with little useful info apart from pricing/licensing.
Sure, but we gotta start somewhere, right? :) What would you find most useful to add next?
Well, the actual comparison from experience.
Hmm, I don’t think sharing my personal experience would be that useful. For one, I’ve only used a handful of these tools long enough to give a meaningful assessment. More importantly, though, these tools evolve so quickly that anything I wrote would likely be outdated almost immediately.
I'd rather give folks an overview over which tools exist and some info about their popularity, price point etc.
Maybe it would be cool to add links to the founder's accounts on X, Youtube etc. where they share new releases and what they're working on...