Originally published on rikuq.com. Republished here for Dev.to's readers.
I dropped my $100/month Claude Max subscription and migrated entirely back to Antigravity. If you want the verdict upfront: Claude Desktop is still the best tool for beginners who need the AI to guess their intent from clumsy prompts. But if you have solid documentation discipline and cost efficiency is a serious factor for your SaaS, Antigravity is now the clear winner.
I'm a Chartered Accountant by trade with zero formal coding experience. I’ve shipped three production AI SaaS—Prism, Citare, and BatchWise—relying entirely on AI tools. I started with VSCode, moved to Antigravity (when it was just an IDE), and eventually landed on the Claude Desktop App. Claude was incredible; it operated in the background, handled my stack, and I didn't need to know what was happening under the hood.
But the bills started stacking up. When my Claude usage consistently hit $100 a month, efficiency became a priority. I fired up the new version of Antigravity and found the recent updates had completely transformed it. It is no longer just an IDE—it is a full agentic desktop experience that mirrors what made Claude so good.
| Feature | Claude Desktop App | Antigravity (New Update) |
|---|---|---|
| Best for | ||
| Beginners, unlimited budgets, "pure performance" | Experienced AI directors, cost-conscious solo founders | |
| Pricing | ||
| $100+/mo (Claude Max) | $20/mo (Gemini Advanced) | |
| Agentic Workflow | ||
| Exceptional. The benchmark. | Identical. Background execution, zero friction. | |
| Context Handling | ||
| Better at anticipating intent from messy prompts | Huge total memory, but requires tighter prompting | |
| MCP Support | ||
| Native | Native (handles them just as well) | |
| Verdict | ||
| Keep it if cost doesn't matter | Switch to it if efficiency is the goal |
My path to Antigravity wasn't a calculated feature comparison. It was pure economics combined with a pleasant surprise.
I had previously dropped Antigravity when it was just an IDE. When they released the massive agentic update, I ignored it. I didn't want to invest the time to investigate a new workflow when Claude Desktop was already doing the heavy lifting in the background.
But my $100/mo Claude Max habit was burning cash. Incidentally, my cousin (who works on the Gemini team) gifted me a one-year Gemini subscription. I realized I could get the same work done with any frontier model if I pushed it hard enough. After my Claude plan expired, I booted up the updated Antigravity to use my Gemini access.
The interface had changed completely. It was no longer a traditional IDE. It was exactly like the Claude app.
There wasn't a single dramatic moment where Antigravity won me over. Instead, it was a rapid succession of realisations: Oh, I can do this here too. I can run this MCP just like Claude. Oh, this is exactly the same workflow.
For absolute beginners, Claude is by far the best product. But once you have experience directing AI, you realise you can get almost every frontier model to work like Claude. The secret isn't the model itself—it's prompt engineering and documentation discipline (like strict what-i-did.md
files). Once you cross that threshold of discipline, Claude's specific magic becomes less necessary.
Cost is the main thing here. As a solo founder, shipping is about efficiency.
There are various ways to access Antigravity's models, but I simply use my Gemini subscription. The $20/month tier is more than enough to fully replace the $100/month I was spending on Claude Max.
That $80/month difference is $960 a year. When you are bootstrapping SaaS products solo, that is infrastructure budget you are reclaiming just by switching your desktop client.
If you rely heavily on the Model Context Protocol (MCP) to wire your AI to your stack (Vercel, Cloudflare, GitHub, Supabase), you don't need to worry about the migration. Antigravity handles MCP servers just as well as Claude does. I migrated my entire suite of custom integrations, and so far, I have hit zero issues. It is a 1:1 replacement for the tool-calling workflow.
Antigravity isn't objectively better at everything. There are specific areas where Claude Desktop still holds the crown:
If you are early in your journey, Claude's ability to decipher your messy instructions is worth the premium. The decision matrix is simpler than the Reddit debates make it seem:
Stick with Claude Desktop if: You are not worried about cost, you want pure performance, and you rely on the model to figure out what you mean when you write lazy prompts.
Switch to Antigravity if: You have solid documentation discipline, you know how to prompt effectively, and cost is a serious factor in your operations. It is a clear winner for the cost-conscious solo founder.