Score breakdown
Popularity is tracked separately. Support, ads, sponsorships, and tips never affect these signals.
Why it matters
Useful for advanced users who want to compare a more opinionated multi-agent environment with policy controls, not just another one-pane chat shell.
Who should use it
Who should skip it
Pass on WrongStack/WrongStack if you need something non-technical and turnkey rather than a tool that requires comfort with CLI, dependencies, or system configuration.
About this signal
WrongStack/WrongStack is tracked by RepoRadar as a coding agent in the Developer Tools section. It was first seen on 2026-06-29 and last updated on 2026-06-29. The current verdict is 'try now' with a Silver tier and hard setup difficulty. Across RepoRadar's eight signals, WrongStack/WrongStack is strongest on workflow potential (9.4) and open-source/build quality (8.4) and weakest on setup ease (4.2) — a profile worth weighing against your own priorities. This page summarizes the evidence RepoRadar has captured from captured source metadata. The score, tier, risk label, and verdict on this page are never influenced by sponsorship, ads, or tips — they reflect only the usefulness, popularity, novelty, momentum, maturity, and evidence signals described in the RepoRadar methodology.
How this item is evaluated
RepoRadar assigned WrongStack/WrongStack a composite score of 7.9 out of 10, placing it in the Silver tier. This score combines weighted sub-signals: usefulness (35%), novelty (18%), momentum (14%), maturity (10%), open-source/build quality (7%), evidence quality (6%), workflow potential (6%), and setup ease (4%). Popularity is tracked separately at 11.0 and never affects the composite score or tier. The risk label of 'conditional' reflects inherent user-impacting hazards, not generic novelty. Items with no risk flag may still require normal code review before production use.
Putting this into practice? Read How to vet an AI agent or MCP server before you wire it in for the checklist behind this score.
Risk explanation
It can read and edit project files, run shell commands, and optionally sign into subscription-backed providers over OAuth, so keep the first run in a low-risk repository and review provider auth flow before trusting it with real work.
