2025 is wrapping up. Let’s see what our Cursor community shipped!
Drop a reply with:
What you built (+ link if public)
Screenshot or quick demo
How Cursor helped
Apps, sites, tools, games, scripts, side projects. Anything goes. No project is too small!
Even if you can’t share links/demo, we’d still love to hear what Cursor helped you build this year!
We’ll pick some of our favorites and you might find a surprise in your inbox!
thanks to cursor i’ve created and mainted a jupyter notebooks to collect data about the clusterization results of more than 42 models. Thanks to that i’ve created an “evaluation framework” which allowed me to compare several models on a chart.
An interactive dashboard about the test results
THE CHART!
showing the information is important almost as getting the correct data point.
A robots.txt checker tool in python
As a proof of concept (there are more advanced tool in the community, like screaming frog!), me and a colleague made a demo during a SEO conference. This tool checks the crawlability of a url by a bot, while obeying the rules of the robots.txt file.
We developed the utility before the conference and shown the almost real time capabilities of Grok Code inside cursor, to “compile” the project starting from a well designed Product definition document, in under 5 minutes.
I’ve always wanted to be a programmer, but I kept getting distracted by “more important things”, which led me to start and then abandon learning 11 different programming languages. Thanks to LLMs and the Cursor IDE, since the beginning of this year I’ve finally started creating real applications, although most of them haven’t become commercial products.
And for the past couple of months, I’ve finally matured enough to do what I wanted to become a programmer for in the first place
But if I had to single out one project, the most popular one was Agent Compass. I would never have thought I could get 69 GitHub stars for a Markdown document.
I usually don’t specify roles when interacting with neural networks, but in this project, a role is assigned to both the neural network and the user. Because thanks to Cursor, I can finally focus on software engineering itself, rather than just coding.
I might be confusing it with Agent Enforcer repo, but it seems I simply asked Claude Sonnet to create a repository around the User Rules I already had; I edited the Readme to match my style and pressed the publish button.
As someone who isn’t a programmer or a coder (I only know some HTML / CSS and how the web works), I’m happy I was able to build a fully-working prototype!
I started with a PRD, then specced features, database schema, etc. and built it step by step using Cursor.
Initially, I was typing everything out, but then switched to dictating to Cursor using Superwhisper. It was a game-changer. It makes writing long prompts not feel like a chore. Couldn’t have done it without this combo.
Tech stack is Next.js + Supabase + Vercel
It was a lot of fun working on this 2-month long project!
Haven’t done any marketing or promotions yet, it was just for fun. I might share it with my gym friend group so we have a trusted database of what’s available where
This world didn’t exist an hour ago. But with cursor Built entirely on pure vibe coding and. Wicked reaserch paper , this is my latest experiment in with. Video to 3D generated world using Gaussian splats and flow state vibes
Pure curiosity can take u places. With cursor just need enough VRAM and curiosity to break things and tolerance to terminal epilepsy.
In 2025 we used cursor agent extensively to build https://make0.ai
This is not an open source project but sharing it anyway!
We started this to give users a canvas where they can brain dump their thoughts, data etc and build apps, presentations, images etc and automate social media channel posting. I’ve been particularly using this for automating my Linkedin.
With cursor I’ve made a good project that instead of take me 6 months of development (yes, I’m a full-stack developer) I’ve made in just one month. It’s a project for a school:
I’ve been building and rebuilding Apprentice - Tattoo Scheduling it allows tattoo shops and artists manage their clients, bookings, and collect payments all from one place.
With cursor, I have been building Malk.tv (currently in beta), a social platform for video curators to organize and share their favorite video content.
I have been working on this concept for some time now in various iterations, but only with Cursor have I finally been able to bring my vision to life over the past year. As a Product Manager who has always wanted to be able to develop my own concepts from the ground up, Cursor has been life changing.
I am building a tool for myself which is an Electron app which allows me to work with multiple different LLMs.
There are tools called “run_tool” or “run_code”.
Tools are TypeScript code that run inside their own single use Deno process in a sandboxed Docker container using gVisor.
Agents and tools can have Deno permissions assigned to them
I am focusing on the the Agent as the main part of the app. The idea being there are not subagents, just agents, with tools attached, which can spawn other agents.
I took inspiration from WhatsApps layout with how we conversate with humans, and Cursor/VSCode styling for the app.
Here is the code. It’s not production ready or anything, simply just a place to share and store:
100% of the code was written with Cursor using mostly these models:
Composer 1
GPT 5.2 (Medium reasoning)
Claude Opus 4.5
Now, I find I am doing very targeted work with Composer 1, and it is fast and good.
This started as a Docker app, with Go backend serving HTML with Turbo, then HTMX, then realised not using a SPA for modern apps is hard as I was still writing so much TypeScript to manipulate the DOM.
Then I moved from Go still serving JSON, then SolidJS rendering. Then I realised LLMs I am working with don’t have much info on SolidJS, so I bit the bullet and went back to React 19 just in SPA mode (Next.js too much magic IMO, I actually think React is too much magic still, I like to know what is going on). I then thought, well, if this is just a desktop app, no need for Go. Why not just use Bun. Whilst using Bun, I thought about Electron and have been happy since. ANYWAY TLDR The point is, without Cursor it would have taken me months and months to prototype and jump around, but this has maybe been like a months work.
Other than this:
I built a startup product for 5 months using Cursor 100% between Jan-June for these people, but parted ways with them eventually.
I have used Cursor at my work for pretty much anything. If a company isn’t embracing AI tools, I would quit and find another job.
I used Cursor to help me with some unfamiliar ETL work recently where I had a monstrous 3000+ line stored procedure, syntax unfamiliar, and I had to reverse some parts to make rather large modification to it. (the stored procedure loaded a CSV with around 50000+ rows and 250+ columns). Cursor helped me break it down, start to write Python to probe the database and see what this thing was doing, and then allow me to correctly make the changes and safely update the code.
Hey Sanjeed, thanks for opening up a place for people to share their 2025 work.
I’m an animator by trade, and have dabbled in some game development over the years. I’ve always found software dev way trickier and consistently felt defeated through all my attempts to build something complete and meaningful. The vibe coding space has totally opened the space up for me, I’m so grateful for it.
Just in the nick of time for 2025 to wrap up, I launched a pet food preference tracking app with Cursor. I actually started the project in Bolt and got a fair amount of the way there but hit major road blocks in project scope and error loops. I decided to give Cursor a go and it breezed through the issues and allowed me to continue improving, and eventually finishing and launching the app! No shade thrown at Bolt, it was before their V2 came out, but man Cursor was just the right wingman for the job and I’m already working through more ideas with it - I’m so excited and will be here to stay
Been using cursor to build Green Goods an community and environmental impact reporting application for local hubs to utilize to capture public goods work.
Built Aphasio - iPhone speech therapy app for stroke survivors with aphasia
My mom had a stroke in May and suffers from aphasia as a result. She initially got speech therapy in the inpatient unit and was doing okay, but as soon as she got home without constant practice, her speech started declining. That’s why I built this app.
Aphasio is an iPhone app that gives stroke survivors AI-powered speech exercises they can do anytime, anywhere - no therapist required. Patients practice everyday phrases across categories like greetings, emergency phrases, food and drink, daily needs, family conversations. The app provides real-time pronunciation feedback using speech recognition and tracks progress over time so patients and caregivers can see what’s working.
I included ElevenLabs voice cloning (hackathon sponsor) and cloned my own voice, so my mom can practice with me guiding her through exercises even when I’m not physically there with her.
The app gives stroke survivors the daily practice they need to maintain and improve their communication skills at home or use AI voices to speak for themselves when they can’t.
Started learning iOS development in August 2025 with zero coding experience. I discovered Cursor not long after that. Four months later in December 2025, this app won Cursor Hackathon in Chiang Mai where I was competing as a solo builder. The App is built entirely in Swift/SwiftUI. Cursor let me go from a marketing and conversion optimization background to building and shipping real apps to the App Store.
A bit late to the thread, but excited to share that with Cursor, in 2025, I built version 1 of Warren, an automated backtesting system for simple, deterministic trading algorithms.
This year, I’m already deep into building a new, better architecture and I’m hoping to launch the live-trading bot end of Q1. I’m overhauling the UI to make it less corporate slop and more of a tribute to retro systems and I’m using Kafka to decouple services.