Editorial take
Why it stands out
Continue should be framed as a developer agent platform and workflow system, not just as an IDE autocomplete tool.
Tool profile
AI agent platform for development workflows across Mission Control, terminal, IDE, and CI/CD, with clear team pricing and automation-oriented agent building.
Developer AI agents
Continue belongs in the database because it has grown well beyond an editor assistant into a platform for creating, running, and automating AI agents across developer workflows. The official docs describe Mission Control, tasks, workflows, integrations, terminal usage, CI/CD hooks, and reusable agents built from prompts, rules, and tools. That matters because Continue is no longer only about autocomplete or chat in an IDE. It is about standardizing repeatable AI workflows for engineering teams.
It also deserves inclusion because the pricing is legible enough to compare seriously. The current Continue pricing pages show a Starter model with pay-as-you-go usage, a Team plan at $20 per seat per month including credits, and Company as custom pricing, while the hub pricing surfaces also show Solo and Team structures for Mission Control and agent governance. Even with multiple product surfaces, the core commercial picture is clear: open and self-directed entry points for individuals, then team governance and managed controls for organizations.
Quick fit
Editorial take
Continue should be framed as a developer agent platform and workflow system, not just as an IDE autocomplete tool.
What it does well
Primary use cases
Fit notes
Pricing snapshot
Continue currently presents Starter at pay-as-you-go token pricing starting around $3 per million tokens, Team at $20 per seat per month with included credits, and Company as custom pricing. Other official pricing surfaces also describe Solo and Team governance plans for Mission Control and agent management.