All comparisons

Cursor vs OpenCode

A head-to-head look at Cursor and OpenCode — two popular AI coding agents — and how BuySkills fits into each workflow.

Standalone IDE

Cursor

Cursor is a VS Code fork rebuilt around AI: inline edits, multi-model routing, and an agentic Composer that can plan and apply multi-file changes. It is one of the most popular AI-first editors among professional developers.

Cursor plugins on BuySkills

Terminal CLI

OpenCode

OpenCode is an open-source, terminal-based AI coding agent that works with any provider — Anthropic, OpenAI, local models, and more. Its provider-agnostic design makes it a favorite for developers who want portability.

OpenCode plugins on BuySkills

Side-by-side

Dimension Cursor OpenCode
Surface Standalone IDE Terminal CLI
In a nutshell AI-first VS Code fork with agent mode Open-source terminal AI coding agent
BuySkills install command npx buyskills install <skill> npx buyskills install <skill>
Cross-agent skill sharing Yes — via BuySkills Yes — via BuySkills

Use both with a single skill catalog

You don't have to pick. BuySkills lets you install a skill once and use it across Cursor, OpenCode, and every other supported AI coding agent — without repurchasing or reconfiguring.

  • One command to install in either agent: npx buyskills install <skill>
  • Skills pinned to a version you choose — Cursor or OpenCode updates won't break your loop
  • Explore plugins by category: testing, refactoring, documentation, git workflows, and more

Cursor vs OpenCode — FAQ

Should I pick Cursor or OpenCode?

It depends on where you work. Cursor is ai-first vs code fork with agent mode, while OpenCode is open-source terminal ai coding agent. Many developers use both and share skills across them via BuySkills — so the choice is less binary than it used to be.

Can I use the same plugins in Cursor and OpenCode?

Yes. BuySkills is designed for cross-agent portability. Install a skill once with the BuySkills CLI and it becomes available in both Cursor and OpenCode — and every other supported agent — without a second purchase or install.

How is installing BuySkills skills different between Cursor and OpenCode?

It isn't, from your side. You run `npx buyskills install <skill>`, and the CLI writes the skill to the directory each agent reads from. Cursor and OpenCode pick up the skill without any extra config.

How do BuySkills skills differ from Cursor .cursorrules?

`.cursorrules` files configure Cursor's behavior per project, while BuySkills packages reusable capabilities — prompts, tools, and scripts — that Cursor's agent can invoke on demand. The two are complementary: rules shape style, skills extend capability.

Does OpenCode support MCP alongside BuySkills skills?

Yes. OpenCode supports MCP servers and BuySkills skills in parallel. You can use MCP for long-running services and BuySkills for bundled, versioned capabilities — they do not conflict.

Still deciding?

Install BuySkills CLI once and the skills you discover today work in whichever agent you pick tomorrow.

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