DeepAgent: Is this new AI really better than Manis and Genspark?
In a recent review, tech blogger Julian Goldie tested DeepAgent from Abacus AI, a new contender in the autonomous AI agent market that's been marketed as a "god tier" alternative to popular options like Genspark and Manis – but at a more affordable price point of $10/month compared to Manis's $49 entry tier.
What is DeepAgent?
DeepAgent claims to automate a variety of tasks including:
- Building websites and applications
- Creating SaaS tools
- Generating presentations and reports
- Connecting with Gmail to manage emails
The test results: Not quite "god tier" yet
When put through real-world testing with identical prompts used across platforms, DeepAgent showed some concerning limitations:
The good
- Successfully created a functioning Space Invaders game on first attempt
- Generates dedicated subdomain deployments
- Provides detailed thinking process and research capabilities
- Pricing is competitive at $10/month
The significant limitations
- Limited to only 2 tasks per day
- Cannot run multiple tasks simultaneously (unlike Genspark)
- Tasks have compute point limits that can expire before completion
- Some advertised features (like Gmail integration) were difficult to locate
Head-to-head comparison
When tasked with creating a website about Julian's SEO agency and a Space Invaders game, Genspark consistently outperformed DeepAgent:
-
Website creation test:
- Genspark: Created a complete, modern website with actual details from Julian's business
- DeepAgent: Created an extensive plan but ran out of compute points before completion
- Manis: Created a functional but generic website with stock images
-
Game creation test:
- Genspark: Created a more sophisticated, almost "PlayStation level" game
- DeepAgent: Created a basic but functioning Space Invaders game
- Winner: Genspark by a significant margin
Current rankings according to the test
- Genspark: Best overall performance, unlimited simultaneous tasks
- Manis: Less restricted than DeepAgent but not