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With Anthropic’s Claude Code and OpenAI’s Codex gaining traction as coding assistants, Cursor has been feeling the pressure to ramp up its own AI-powered coding offerings. Enter Cursor 3, the company’s new environment for creating and managing multiple AI agents working on your behalf.
Per the company, Cursor 3 is a “unified workspace for building software with agents.” Less of a model overhaul and more of a new interface, the new release seeks to turn the user into something more like a manager who can dictate orders to a team of AI agents. According to the company, Cursor 3 can be used to manage both local and cloud-based agents, and allows users to work across multiple repositories on a project.
The shift that Cursor 3 seems to present is more of an embrace of vibe coding at a time where other leading AI firms are increasingly encroaching on the territory once dominated by Cursor. The company’s core product, which is still available through the new environment, lets developers ask AI assistants for help in an integrated development environment. This interface lets those developers take a step back from the coding tasks and do more delegating to multiple agents while providing a 30,000-foot view of the work.
The launch of Cursor 3 comes at time when the company really could use a win. Claude Code has reportedly captured up to 54% of the AI coding market, according to data from Menlo Ventures, and OpenAI’s recently released Codex 5.3 set new highs in a number of benchmarking tests—and the company is offering unlimited access to the tool in order to pull in more users. Cursor still remains a popular tool among product and engineering teams, but its reign as the only game in town is long gone.
The company could also use a bit of reputational repair after the bumpy launch of Composer 2, the company’s underlying coding model that dropped last month. The model was supposed to be a marker of Cursor separating itself from some of its competitors, but instead managed to link the company even closer to a third-party once it was discovered that Composer 2 was largely just a licensed version of the open-source Kimi 2.5 model made by Moonshot AI. In general, there’s nothing wrong with licensing another model this way, but the fact that Cursor didn’t disclose it up front and seemed to try to bury it has made some users a bit wary of the company’s tactics.
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Source: Gizmodo