The Good Tech Companies - The Fork Reshaping MCP Testing: How a 24-Year-Old CTO Is Taking On One of AI’s Biggest Players
Episode Date: November 13, 2025This story was originally published on HackerNoon at: https://hackernoon.com/the-fork-reshaping-mcp-testing-how-a-24-year-old-cto-is-taking-on-one-of-ais-biggest-players. ... A 24-year-old developer built MCPJam, an open-source rival that outpaced Anthropic’s Inspector—and may redefine how AI agents are tested. Check more stories related to machine-learning at: https://hackernoon.com/c/machine-learning. You can also check exclusive content about #mcp, #mcp-testing, #mcp-architecture, #mcp-integration, #founder-stories, #mcpjam, #ai-agent-testing, #good-company, and more. This story was written by: @stevebeyatte. Learn more about this writer by checking @stevebeyatte's about page, and for more stories, please visit hackernoon.com. When Anthropic released the Model Context Protocol, it promised a new era of agentic AI—but left developers wanting better testing tools. Marcelo Jimenez Rocabado, a 24-year-old CTO, forked Anthropic’s MCP Inspector to build MCPJam, a faster, more collaborative open-source alternative. Backed by Open Core Ventures and a growing developer community, MCPJam is now shaping the standard for AI server testing, proving that agility and open collaboration can outpace even the biggest players.
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The Fork Reshaping MCP Testing.
How a 24-year-old CTO is taking on one of Ice Biggest Players by Steve Byatt.
When Marcelo Jimenez-Racabato decided to fork Anthropics Open Source MCP Inspector in late
2024, he wasn't just starting another developer tool.
He was making a bet that one of the most well-funded AI companies in the world had fundamentally
misunderstood what developers needed to build the future of eye agents. Six months later, the 24-year-old
CTO of MCP Jam has proven his instincts right. The project has exploded from 200 to over 1,300
GitHub stars, build a thriving community of 200 plus Discord members, and attracted venture
backing from OpenCore Ventures, all while Anthropics' original inspector languishes weeks
behind the MCP specification with no clear roadmap. They didn't hire a team for this. Marcello's
says, reflecting on why Anthropics approach fell short. There are only two full-time maintainers
for a project that gets a lot of issues, a lot of PRs per day. It's more than two people to handle.
The problem Anthropic couldn't solve the model context protocol, released by Anthropic in November
2024, fundamentally shifts how AI agents interact with tools and data. Companies like
Osana, PayPal, Versel, and GitHub are already building MCP servers to prepare for the agentic
transformation. The problem is that no one has built true testing infrastructure for these servers.
Marcelo discovered this firsthand while building MCP servers himself. The Anthropic inspector existed,
but it was incomplete. It did the job, but it could have made better improvements, he explains.
The developer experience lacked features. It was open source, but hard to contribute to. And once you
did, it also required some time to review. The breaking point came when Marcelo realized Anthropic
wasn't just slow. They were philosophically opposed to what developers actually needed. They don't
Dahlm testing and all indeterministic testing. It's kind of counterintuitive given that MCP is made for
LLMs, he says. While developers were begging for an LLM playground to test their servers against
real language models in real environments, Anthropic never built it. So Marcello, along with his co-founder
Matthew Wong, did instead. A contrarian bet on McP's future while most developers in the community
expect clients to improve, Marcello believes the real opportunity lies in building better servers.
I think a lot of people are expecting clients to be better, he explains. But at the end of the day,
I think servers have to be better and don't rely on the client because right now a lot of developers
only use three clients, which are like Cursor, Claude, and Chad GPT. As the AI agent ecosystem matures,
there will be hundreds or thousands of different agent clients deployed. You can't be assuming
that they have the same system prompt as these other big ones, are they're not going to have the
sammy tools, like a web browser tool, for example. So you just want to build a server that's
defensible against any client. This insight stems from his broader bet on the future of AI. I think everything's
going to be agent run, and we're making a bet in the layer that's going to enable that, he says.
It's not even going to be about what model itis. It's going to be more of, like, who's managing
the context better. For Marcelo, MCP isn't just
a protocol. It's the protocol. It's just in the name, right? Model context protocol. It's all about that.
Building with a community focus since forking the Anthropic Inspector, Marcelo and his co-founder
Matthew have moved with remarkable speed. Under the guidance of OpenCore Ventures Catalyst program,
they've not only grown their GitHub stars but built genuine community infrastructure.
If we didn't join OCV, we would not have built our Discord community. We would not have posted good
first issues on GitHub, which led to new contributors supporting the project, Matthew admits.
That shift from peer user acquisition to community building has paid off. MCP Jam now has seven
active external contributors. The product roadmap is equally ambitious. While the open source MCP
Jam inspector provides core testing and debugging capabilities, the team is developing a premium
MCP Eval's framework that will benchmark server performance across all environments and LLMs. Build that into your
C, CD pipeline, and we can monitor whether changes to the MCP server made an improvement or
introduced a regression, Matthew explains. But perhaps most tellingly, major companies are already
taking notice. The team is now testing MCP servers for enterprise clients and helping them improve
their server design. As the enterprise world accelerates toward an agentic future,
Marcelo is boldly betting that every company with an API will also build an MCP server. The question
isn't whether Anthropic made a mistake in underinvesting in their inspector. The question is whether
they can catch up to the 24-year-old who saw the gap they left behind. For Marcelo, the answer is
clear. We are an MCP first company. We can move faster, and we have more domain expertise,
he says. If an MCP server works on MCP jam, it'll work anywhere. With over a thousand developers
already betting on his vision, Marcelo is proving that sometimes the best response to a tech giant's
oversight is to build what they couldn't or wouldn't. Thank you for listening to this
Hackernoon story, read by artificial intelligence. Visit hackernoon.com to read, write, learn and
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