How Moshi stacks up
Honest, side-by-side breakdowns of Moshi against the terminals and SSH clients people already know. Each one pairs a fast feature table with a real walkthrough — so you can see, not just read, where a phone-first terminal built for AI coding agents pulls ahead and where the alternative still makes sense.
Moshi vs Termius
Termius is the do-everything SSH client across every platform. Moshi is the phone-first terminal built for driving Claude Code, Codex, and friends — agent approvals, voice, and diff review included.
Moshi vs Blink Shell
Blink is the open-source, Mosh-first power terminal for iPhone and iPad. Moshi wraps the terminal in an agent cockpit — approvals, push, voice, image paste, and diff review for driving Claude Code and Codex.
Moshi vs Secure ShellFish
Secure ShellFish is a leading iOS/Mac SSH + SFTP + Files.app client, and it has added thoughtful agent affordances. Moshi is agent-first — a structured approval inbox, diff viewer, Mosh, voice modes, and Apple Watch actions — for driving Claude Code and Codex.
Moshi vs Happy
Happy is a free, open-source, E2E-encrypted mobile client for Claude Code and Codex, built on a relay. Moshi is a paid native iOS terminal that drives the same agents over a direct connection to your machine — with a real shell, Mosh, image paste, and diff review.
Moshi vs Kittylitter
Kittylitter is a free, open-source, Codex-first agent client — it can even run Codex on-device, and reaches your machines over LAN, SSH, or peer-to-peer. Moshi is a paid native terminal, Claude-Code-first, with Mosh, diff review, image paste, and Live Activity.




