Devstral 2 & vibe by Mistral AI the hidden gems of the AI Coding Agent.
For about a year, I have been working daily with various coding assistants, choosing different tools depending on my mood, needs and constraints. My journey has included testing Windsurf and Tabnine professionally, while personally transitioning from being a fervent Copilot user to adopting Claude Code.
During this exploration, I discovered Devstral 2, which ultimately replaced Claude Code in my workflow for several compelling reasons:
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Aesthetic Excellence: The tool offers a beautiful user experience.
From the blog post announcement to the API documentation andvibeitself, the color scheme, visual effects, and overall polish create a distinctly pleasant working environment. -
Comparable Performance: In the "me, myself & I benchmark", Devstral 2 code suggestion is on par with Claude Code.
While both trend to occasionally overlook framework documentation ; they deliver excellent results overall when refactoring, suggesting commit message, or tweaking CSS. -
Cost-Effective and Open Source: Devstral 2 is significantly more affordable than Claude Code and is open source.
Users receive 1 million tokens for trial, with pricing at $0.10/$0.30 for Devstral Small 2 past the 1st million.
With Claude Code, I frequently hit usage limits, even after employing/compactcommands and tracking my/usage.
And even if you bust thevibeusage limits it has: -
Local Execution Capability: Although
vibetime to first token can be slower thanclaude, Mistral offers a crucial advantage !
Both Devstral 2 & small version are open source with the ability to run entirely on local machines, providing greater control, privacy, and if you have the gear, blazing-fast performance⚡.
The documentation to run it locally is rather sparse and Devstral-2-small is still relatively resource-intensive, therefore needing some tweaks.
Here are the instructions for running Devstral 2 small + vibe on Ubuntu 24.04 with an NVIDIA L40S with 24GB VRAM hosted by Scaleway .