Most AI IDE trials are long enough to make you curious, but not long enough to make you confident.
A few days of autocomplete demos and onboarding is not the same thing as testing a tool against your real workflow. You still have to see how it behaves in an actual codebase, how it handles your prompts, how often it gets in your way, and whether it saves enough time to justify another monthly subscription.
That is the part I think a lot of developers skip.
The real problem with AI IDE trials
If you're comparing multiple tools, the clock works against you.
You install one, poke at it for a couple of evenings, get distracted by real work, and suddenly the trial is over. Then you move to the next one and repeat the same shallow evaluation. At the end of it, you are still expected to pick a subscription.
That usually means one of two things:
- You buy based on hype
- You buy based on the tool you happened to test first
Neither is a great way to choose something you'll use every day.
What a useful evaluation actually looks like
For me, a proper AI IDE evaluation should answer a few boring but important questions:
- Does it help on your real stack, not just toy examples?
- Is the prompt flow fast enough to stay in the loop?
- Does it work well in refactors, debugging, and navigation?
- Does it feel better than your current setup after the novelty wears off?
- Is it worth the price once the subscription starts?
That takes more than a weekend.
Why I built Onyx Pro
I built Onyx Pro because I wanted a cleaner way to re-evaluate AI IDEs on the same machine before committing to one.
Onyx Pro is a local desktop utility. It runs on your machine, not in the cloud. The goal is simple: give developers another pass at evaluating supported AI IDEs against real projects so they can make a more informed decision before paying for a subscription.
A few things I cared about while building it:
- Local-first use
- No need to upload code or workspace data
- One app for multiple supported tools
- One-time payment instead of another subscription
- A free trial for Onyx Pro itself, so you can test the utility before buying it
The point is not "get software for free." The point is to stop making subscription decisions with incomplete information.
If you're evaluating AI IDEs right now
My advice is simple:
- Test on a real project
- Compare more than one tool
- Judge the tool after novelty wears off
- Decide based on fit, not marketing
If that second pass matters to you, Onyx Pro is built for exactly that use case.
Independent utility. Not affiliated with or endorsed by Cursor, Windsurf, Kiro, Trae, Warp, Antigravity, or Codex.
Use is your responsibility and may be subject to the terms, licenses, and laws that apply to the software you choose to test.
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