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ArchGenie vs Opencode

ArchGenie and Opencode are both coding assistants tracked by AIDiveForge. Below is a side-by-side comparison of pricing, capabilities, platforms, and ownership — sourced from each tool's live website and verified before publishing.

ArchGenie

ArchGenie

ArchGenie closes that gap by generating infrastructure code directly from architectural descriptions or uploaded sketches, then running security and compliance validation before anything touches a repository. The vendor describes a workflow where design intent moves to a validated pull request without a manual translation layer. Cost estimation across AWS, Azure, and GCP is built into the generation step, not bolted on afterward. The free tier is credit-capped at a low threshold, so teams doing iterative design work hit the ceiling fast. No API is exposed and no self-hosting is offered, which means the tool sits outside any existing pipeline automation a team already runs.

Opencode

Opencode

OpenCode is an open-source coding agent that runs in your terminal, a desktop app, or an IDE extension, connecting to 75+ LLM providers including local models. You can spin up multiple agents on the same project in parallel, share debug sessions via a link, and log in with your existing GitHub Copilot or ChatGPT Plus credentials rather than paying again. The no-data-storage architecture makes it viable in privacy-sensitive environments where cloud-only tools are ruled out. The ceiling shows up when you need validated, consistent model performance out of the box — that lives behind the paid Zen add-on, not in the free tier.

AttributeArchGenieOpencode
PricingPaidPaid
Price€29/mo
Free trialNoNo
Open sourceNoYes
Has APINoNo
Self-hosted optionNoYes
PlatformsWeb-based SaaSTerminal, Desktop (beta macOS/Windows/Linux), IDE extension
Pros
  • Generates infrastructure code directly from natural-language descriptions or uploaded diagrams, so the manual translation layer between architecture and Terraform disappears and the first draft is ready in minutes rather than days.
  • Security scanning and compliance validation run at generation time rather than in a separate CI stage, which means a misconfigured IAM policy or missing encryption gets flagged before the pull request exists — not after a security review blocks it.
  • Built-in cost estimation across AWS, Azure, and GCP is part of the output, so architects see the financial impact of a design decision at the moment they make it rather than discovering it during a budget review.
  • Direct export to version control as a pull request means the output lands in the team's existing review workflow without a copy-paste step, reducing the chance of drift between what was validated and what gets merged.
  • Observability and monitoring configurations are generated alongside infrastructure code, so the gap between 'code that deploys' and 'code that is observable' does not become a separate ticket.
  • Connects to 75+ LLM providers including local models, so switching from a cloud API to an on-premise model when data policy demands it is a configuration change rather than a migration.
  • Reuses existing GitHub Copilot or ChatGPT Plus/Pro subscriptions, which means teams already paying for those services get OpenCode's agent layer without an additional per-seat cost.
  • Multi-session parallel agents on the same project, so a developer running a refactor and a test-generation task simultaneously does not queue one behind the other.
  • No code or context stored by the vendor, which means the tool can be deployed in privacy-sensitive or regulated environments where most cloud coding assistants are disqualified at the security review.
  • Session sharing via link lets a developer hand a debug session to a colleague or reviewer without screen-sharing or copy-pasting context — the full session state travels with the URL.
Cons
  • The free tier enforces a hard credit cap that limits the number of generations per month; teams doing iterative design — where three or four architecture revisions are normal before a design is stable — exhaust the free allocation quickly and face a paid-only gate before the tool has proven its value in their workflow.
  • No API is available, which means generation cannot be triggered from a CI/CD pipeline, a GitHub Action, or any existing automation; teams that want infrastructure generation to run on push or on a schedule must maintain a separate manual step or abandon the tool in favor of a CLI-driven alternative that fits inside their pipeline.
  • There is no self-hosted deployment option, so organizations with data residency requirements, air-gapped environments, or policies against sending architecture diagrams to a third-party cloud service cannot use the tool at all — this is the condition under which regulated enterprises switch to open-source IaC generation tooling they can run internally.
  • Model quality and consistency across the free tier's 75+ providers is unvalidated — teams that need reliable agent output without running their own benchmarks hit this wall on the first serious project, at which point they are paying for the Zen add-on or sourcing their own curated model list.
  • The desktop app is in beta on all three platforms; production teams that need a stable, non-beta GUI for daily driver use are back to the terminal interface or the IDE extension until the desktop release matures — the beta label is not a soft warning when a broken update interrupts a sprint.
  • There is no built-in team management, access control, or audit logging described in the vendor's page — organizations that need to track which agents ran what prompts on which codebase for compliance purposes will find those controls absent and move to an enterprise-tier coding platform that ships them by default.
Bottom line

Opencode is open source. Choose based on which difference matters most for your workflow.

Frequently asked questions

What is the difference between ArchGenie and Opencode?

ArchGenie is Paid, while Opencode is Paid and open source. Compare pricing, free trial, API, platforms, and pros/cons in the table above on AIDiveForge.

Is ArchGenie better than Opencode?

It depends on your workflow. Use the side-by-side attributes (pricing, open source, API, self-hosted, platforms) to decide. AIDiveForge does not rank a universal winner — we publish verified facts so you can choose.

ArchGenie vs Opencode: which should I pick?

Pick ArchGenie if its pricing model, openness, or platform fit matches your constraints; pick Opencode otherwise. Check free-trial availability on each listing if you want to test before committing.

Comparison data is sourced and verified by the AIDiveForge data pipeline. AIDiveForge is editorially independent.