Artëm built Stopilot: the editor that refuses to write code
Artëm built Stopilot, a code editor that refuses to write code until the developer formulates the task in plain language. It's a response to one problem: Cursor

Artëm built Stopilot over a weekend — a code editor that refuses to work. For any prompt, it responds: "First, formulate the task in human words." Within 8 months, the project reached 1.29 million rubles per month.
Why Cursor Became a Problem
The usual story about AI tools looks like this: a developer opens Cursor, builds a SaaS over a weekend, posts a screenshot of the MRR, and explains that the key is to validate hypotheses quickly without thinking. Artëm noticed something different. Cursor solved the problem of code writing speed, but created a new one: code is written faster than it can be understood. A developer gets generated code and doesn't know how to maintain or scale it.
How Stopilot Works
The core idea is simple. The editor doesn't generate code until the developer explains the task in one paragraph. It's not a replacement for Cursor, but a complement for teams tired of mountains of incomprehensible code. The tool forces a developer to think first, then code.
- Stops the impulse to write code immediately
- Forces requirements to be formulated in human words
- Only then offers a solution
- Sold to companies with large developer teams
First 8 Months
Artëm built the MVP over a weekend. Within 8 months, Stopilot reached 1.29 million rubles per month. It sells to teams that hired many developers after the AI tools wave and now manage masses of generated code that no one is able to maintain. It's not about rapid growth, but about a healthy development process.
What This Means
Not all AI tools should write code automatically. Sometimes AI should help a developer understand the task rather than take it into its own hands. Stopilot demonstrated that there is demand for criticism of the pace of generated code — and it's bigger than expected.