Backed By Replit
A cloud-based IDE for collaborative software development.
Replit is a cloud-based integrated development environment (IDE) that allows users to build, deploy, and host applications directly from their browser while offering AI-powered tools like Replit Agent.
Build applications directly in the browser
Use various programming languages
Access to a full-featured IDE
Work on projects with others in real-time
Share code and collaborate effectively
Real-time code editing with team members
Utilize Replit Agent for automated tasks
Receive AI-driven code suggestions
Streamline development workflows
Deploy applications directly from the IDE
Host applications in the cloud
Easy application deployment
Try out new languages and technologies
Experiment with different coding concepts
Ideal for learning to code
Centralized development environment
Simplified project management
Improved team communication
Basic coding environment
Full access to Replit Agent and advanced Assistant capabilities
Collaboration tools
AI Code Generation & Chat (Replit Agent/Assistant)
Cloud-based IDE (Instant setup)
Real-time Collaboration (Shareable links)
Built-in hosting/Deployment tools
Support for dozens of programming languages (including Python, JS, C++)
Real user experiences from across different platforms
Very easy to use, they stay on top of all the new stuff. Feels like sometimes they miss some crucial things but they get to it pretty quickly.
Emanuel Lopez
2 days ago (as of scrape date)
l apps using AI prompts.
oud IDE for rapid prototyping/MVPs.
npredictable credit consumption.
and robust platform stability for mission-critical launches.
Democratizing software creation by making a professional, collaborative IDE instantly accessible across any device, and integrating AI to drastically reduce the barrier to entry for coding and app development.
Inability to work offline (requires stable internet). New credit-based 'effort' pricing can lead to unexpectedly high costs, especially during debugging/small edits. Generic 'AI-bland' UI design often requires significant manual effort to fix. Support has been criticized for being slow and relying on 'useless tips' or bots. Discontinuing the 'Teams for Education' plan caused disruption for educators.