Windsurf alternatives: Frontman vs Cursor for engineering teams
Backend teams weighing Windsurf now have two clear paths: Frontman, an open-source browser agent, and Cursor, an AI-first IDE, each with distinct workflow and governance tradeoffs. PlayCode’s overview underscores that [Windsurf is a VS Code–based AI IDE from Codeium aimed at professional developers](https://playcode.io/windsurf-alternative), not a no‑code builder. It speeds up experienced engineers who live in terminals, local envs, and Git. [Frontman positions itself as an open-source, browser-native agent](https://frontman.sh/vs/windsurf/) that plugs into Next.js, Astro, or Vite, sees the live DOM and computed CSS, supports click-to-select editing, and hot-reloads changes. It’s BYOK for LLMs and self-hostable, which helps with compliance and cost control. For teams preferring an IDE workflow, WordPress practitioners report that [Cursor, a VS Code fork with AI across the project, handles multi-file edits and lets you enforce rules via .cursor/rules](https://instawp.com/best-ai-coding-tools-for-wordpress-developers-in-2026/). That makes it attractive for standardizing style and safety in larger repos.