Have you ever wondered if the AI hype has a common denominator? To no one’s surprise, it isn’t a love of humanity. It’s the love of money.
We were sold a beautiful, frictionless vision of the future where AI code generators were going to democratize software development. Anyone could be a builder. Just type what you want in plain English, and the neural network writes the logic. We called it “vibe coding,” and for a brief, glorious moment, it felt like absolute magic.
But as we discussed in the last article, magic is just science we don’t understand yet. And in the tech industry, magic is usually just a heavily subsidized customer acquisition strategy.
The “Max Mode” Reality Check
Let’s talk about Cursor, the current darling of the AI coding world. Not long ago, a standard monthly subscription got you the keys to the kingdom. You could vibe-code your way through massive enterprise features with virtually unlimited AI assistance.
But then came the inevitable pivot to monetization. Cursor introduced “Max Mode,” a setting that unlocks the maximum context window (e.g., 200k+ tokens) a model supports, allowing it to understand, read, and edit much larger portions of your codebase at once, but with a catch. It uses a token-based pricing plus a 20% upcharge.
TL;DR: You burn your tokens much faster.
Suddenly, the wallets hurt a lot more. Developers are taking to forums reporting that their monthly bills are rapidly ballooning after just a few days of complex system architecture work using models like Claude 3.5 Sonnet or Opus. If you want effective, unlimited access to these heavy-duty models without constantly watching the meter, you are pushed toward their higher-tier or custom enterprise plans.
The cost of vibe coding just became aggressively expensive.
The Hallucination Tollbooth
I experienced this new fun firsthand just recently. I was building a Proof of Concept for our product using the latest model in Cursor’s Max Mode. It was business as usual. The specification (My goal is Spec-driven development) was handed to Opus, crunching numbers began, but because the model is so compute-heavy, I completely decimated my monthly tokens in a matter of hours.
To keep moving, I switched to a lesser, less expensive model. The drop in quality was staggering. The amount of hallucination went through the roof. I suddenly had to stop my spec-driven development and revert to vibe coding in the worst sense of the term. I spent all my time just pointing out every single issue the lesser model created. Previously stable features suddenly stopped working. The UI broke without any good reason. The less expensive model was astonishingly faulty.
It became crystal clear that actual productivity is now firmly gatekept behind the highest premium tier.
Engineering as a Service: The Ultimate Vendor Lock-In
This isn’t a glitch in the matrix. It is the business model. We are witnessing the birth of “Engineering as a Service.”
When your junior developers or non-technical PMs rely entirely on Cursor’s proprietary context-awareness or Claude Code’s agentic workflows to ship features, you stop owning your engineering capabilities. You are merely renting them. And you are renting them from vendors who are burning billions of dollars in compute costs and desperately need to show their VCs a path to profitability.
If you build a product team that can only function when an AI is holding their hand and writing the boilerplate, you are stepping into the most dangerous vendor lock-in the tech industry has ever seen.
The Netflixification of Code
We have seen this exact playbook before. It is what happened with streaming. Netflix hooked us with a cheap, flat-rate, all-you-can-eat buffet of content. Once we threw away our DVDs and the Blockbuster stores closed, the prices steadily crept up, tier by tier. Cost is rising twice a year.
Now, apply that to the AI ecosystem. Just like Netflix, we can expect to see more expensive tokens every year. Every time a new “state-of-the-art” model drops, it will conveniently consume your API credits exponentially faster. An allowance that used to cover hundreds of requests on a lighter model might only cover a fraction of that on the newest, smartest model.
The Inevitable “Hyper Max Mode”
Who knows when there will be a new “Hyper Max Mode” that will make coding 10x more expensive in an instant?
Imagine it is a year from now. Your entire deployment pipeline is completely dependent on an AI IDE to untangle the synthetic spaghetti code it previously generated for you. The vendor introduces a new, mandatory “Enterprise Agent” tier. If you refuse to pay the new premium, your team’s productivity doesn’t just dip by 10%. It drops to almost zero. Because nobody actually understands how the codebase works anymore. The AI wrote it, and now only the AI can read it. For the right price, of course.
When you reach that point, the vendor has total pricing power.
AI is a phenomenal tool. It helped me build that custom domain integration for Emplifi Publisher. But if we outsource our foundational understanding of our own products to third-party APIs, we aren’t becoming 10x developers. We are becoming captive consumers in a newly monopolized market.
The love of money always wins. Make sure you don’t code yourself into a corner you can’t afford to buy your way out of.
