# Why I Switched from Cursor to Antigravity 🖥

> Source: <https://dev.to/itzzsvr_tech74/why-i-switched-from-cursor-to-antigravity-400m>
> Published: 2026-06-21 13:28:04+00:00

*We've all been there.* You find a tool that *completely* revolutionizes your workflow, you sing its praises to anyone who will listen, and you integrate it so deeply into your daily routine that you can't imagine working without it. For a long time, that tool for me was **Cursor**.

But a few weeks ago, I made a change. I uninstalled Cursor and fully committed to **Antigravity**. Here is a breakdown of why I made the switch, the friction I encountered along the way, and why this new setup has drastically improved my workflow.

Cursor is undeniably powerful. Having a built-in AI assistant that understands your entire codebase feels like a *superpower*. When I was spinning up boilerplate code or trying to quickly debug a tricky asynchronous function, Cursor was there to predict my next move.

However, over time, I started noticing a few cracks in the foundation:

`Tab`

and hoping the LLM understood the context. I needed an environment that felt *less* like an overbearing co-pilot and *more* like a seamless extension of my own thoughts.

Switching to Antigravity wasn't about completely abandoning modern tooling; it was about stripping away the noise. The core philosophy of Antigravity is right there in the name—it feels frictionless, lightweight, and completely unburdened.

Here is what immediately stood out:

Antigravity gets out of your way. There are no constant pop-ups, inline suggestions constantly shifting your text, or unprompted refactoring advice. It provides a pure, blank canvas that demands *focus*.

Without AI automatically generating my components, I had to get back into the trenches. Building responsive layouts with Tailwind CSS or writing complex Python scripts required active problem-solving again. My muscle memory came back. The code I write now feels more intentional, more optimized, and significantly easier to debug because I know *exactly* how every single line operates.

One unexpected side effect of ditching heavy AI automation was rediscovering the value of manual documentation. Instead of relying on automated tools to scrape through my repositories and generate sterile `README.md`

files, I went back to writing my Markdown manually. Structuring the documentation myself forces me to think about the project from the end-user's perspective, resulting in much clearer, more *empathetic* guides.

Am I saying Cursor is a bad tool? *Absolutely not.* For rapid prototyping or diving into a completely unfamiliar language, it remains an incredible piece of software.

But for my day-to-day development, Antigravity has brought back the actual *craft* of software engineering. It runs flawlessly, handles heavy full-stack workflows without breaking a sweat, and most importantly, puts me firmly back in the driver's seat.

Sometimes, the best way to move forward isn't to add more artificial intelligence to your stack—it's to remove the gravity holding your own intelligence down.

What has your experience been?Are you fully on board the AI-editor train, or are you looking for more lightweight, distraction-free alternatives? Let me know in the comments!
