I noticed Cursor recently made some changes to its pricing, and it got me wondering about the broader direction of the product.
Cursor started off very focused on developers—helping us code faster with AI and making the dev workflow smoother. But over the past month or two, updates have slowed down quite a bit, and some recent decisions (like Pro users now only having the token-based plan) feel like they’re aimed more at product managers or less technical users.
It made me curious—are you shifting the focus from a dev-first tool to something more like a general AI product builder?
If that’s the case, I’d love to understand how pricing fits into that strategy. And if not, maybe I’m reading too much into it—but as someone who mainly uses Cursor for coding, I’m just trying to understand where things are headed.
Totally get that the team might be exploring bigger ideas, and I’m rooting for the product to grow. But I do think it would help to hear a bit about how you’re thinking about the balance between pricing, product direction, and core dev use cases—especially since things have been pretty quiet on the feature front lately.
Curious if anyone else has noticed the same?