Ask HN: What tools are you using for AI-assisted code review?
My team (around 40 people who write code) is evaluating tools for AI-assisted code review. The market appears to be rife with options, so before starting a series of free trials, I’d like to ask a knowledgeable crowd. What tools or services are you using? Do you use them just for code review, or for other purposes as well, such as incident response or branch management? Why did you choose them, and what do you like or dislike about them?
Discussion Highlights (11 comments)
partsch
Besides local review via codex and Claude code, we are using GitHub Copilot with custom instructions. We just assign it as a reviewer in GitHub and a couple minutes later, the review is done. It raises a lot of issues which are valid and which I never had found. https://docs.github.com/en/copilot/tutorials/customize-code-...
coder_afrique
claude code and github copilot
spgorbatiuk
Frankly, coding with Claude Code and having Copilot read through the PR is complementary and helps to catch some things that slipped through
r_p4rk
Rolled our own with OpenCode, seems to work quite well and meets the goal of being vendor agnostic :)
dbour
Opencode, mainly because I appreciate how one of the founders treats the UX as a first class concern. Its a great tool to learn since it can help us pivot from the potential impending provider crisis where teams may start having to consider things outside of the large labs. As my daily driver at home, I use Pi though because it doesn't get in your way and forces you to understand how the sauce is made.
davebren
I don't use these tools, but wouldn't it be better to use them only after you do a manual review to see if they find anything you missed? Otherwise I could see reviewers getting false confidence and doing a less thorough review. This happens with seeing that unit tests pass.
benoitdest
/review in claude code - the skill pulls the PR from remote and review it. Can post comments also.
Supermancho
Github copilot is a little too opinionated, but we still use it to catch obvious stuff. Codex on top of that with specific rules and syntax requirements.
nxy
For Claude Code, I think the standard is Codex + Gemini. Why these two? Because it “covers” the blind spots the others would miss by themselves.
shsh1312
Claude-Code and Codex in combination, combined with an IDE such as Google Antigravity or VisualStudio-Code are very powerful tools, if your company can invest in hardware the new Mac Studio and MacBook Pro allow optimized local inference through open-source tools such as: https://github.com/antirez/ds4
stpedgwdgfhgdd
Built my own using Claude Code; inside a gitlab job we call Claude Code headless. This works well. There is a tiny mcp server exposed to Claude so it can post inline comments. All existing comments are fed into the reviewer to avoid double posting. The quality of feedback is high. Most complexity is in the SHA management. For example after a rebase. Luckily LLMs understand git very well otherwise it would have been impossible for me.