Compare/Canva AI Video Studio vs Marble 1.1

AI tool comparison

Canva AI Video Studio vs Marble 1.1

Which one should you ship with? Here is the side-by-side panel verdict, pricing read, reviewer split, and community vote comparison.

C

Design & Creative

Canva AI Video Studio

Script-to-video with your brand baked in, not bolted on

Ship

100%

Panel ship

Community

Paid

Entry

Canva's AI Video Studio lets users generate branded video content directly from a written script, automatically applying brand colors, fonts, and tone-of-voice guidelines. It's available to all Canva Teams subscribers and pulls from existing design assets already stored in Canva. The feature positions Canva as a full-stack content creation platform, not just a static design tool.

M

Creative AI

Marble 1.1

World Labs' 3D world generator now auto-expands — bigger worlds, same generation

Ship

75%

Panel ship

Community

Free

Entry

Marble 1.1 and 1.1 Plus are the latest updates to World Labs' generative 3D world model, the flagship product from the spatial AI startup co-founded by Fei-Fei Li. The 1.1 release focuses on visual quality improvements: better lighting and contrast handling, reduction in common visual artifacts (flickering, geometry drift at scene edges), and more consistent object coherence across viewing angles. Marble 1.1 Plus introduces dynamic scale — the model's most significant capability expansion since launch. Previous generations produced worlds of fixed spatial extent; 1.1 Plus automatically analyzes scene complexity and expands world coverage by deploying up to five "dynamic cubes" in a single generation pass. The result is environments that fill out naturally across a larger footprint without requiring multiple generation runs or manual stitching. Target use cases include game environment prototyping, architectural visualization, and training data generation for robotics simulators. World Labs has positioned Marble as the world's first commercially available spatial intelligence product, and the 1.1 updates shipped April 7-8, 2026 via the marble.worldlabs.ai web app. The dynamic scale feature in 1.1 Plus is available on paid plans, while quality improvements in 1.1 apply across all tiers. The updates arrive as competition in AI 3D generation heats up from tools like Luma AI and TripoSG.

Decision
Canva AI Video Studio
Marble 1.1
Panel verdict
Ship · 4 ship / 0 skip
Ship · 3 ship / 1 skip
Community
No community votes yet
No community votes yet
Pricing
Included with Canva Teams (~$10/user/mo)
Freemium (1.1 Plus on paid plan)
Best for
Script-to-video with your brand baked in, not bolted on
World Labs' 3D world generator now auto-expands — bigger worlds, same generation
Category
Design & Creative
Creative AI

Reviewer scorecard

Creator
74/100 · ship

The output is branded video — not stock-footage collages, not AI avatar talking-heads, but motion graphics that actually inherit your existing Canva Brand Kit colors, fonts, and voice guidelines. That's the concrete thing nobody else is doing: the taste layer is pre-loaded from assets you already maintain, which means the defaults are *your* defaults, not some generic SaaS blue. The editing surface is Canva's existing timeline, which is competent enough to iterate but not deep enough for anything beyond social-format content. The fingerprint is still very much Canva — you can spot the motion style immediately — but for teams already living in Canva, that fingerprint is a feature, not a flaw.

80/100 · ship

For concept artists and production designers, Marble 1.1 is a rapid ideation tool that works. Generating a believable environment in 60 seconds to show a client a mood and spatial feel — even as a rough 3D sketch — beats days of modeling. The dynamic scale expansion is exactly what cinematic environment work needs.

Skeptic
71/100 · ship

Direct competitors are HeyGen, Runway, and Adobe Express's video push — and what separates this isn't the AI video quality, which is table-stakes in 2026, but the Brand Kit integration that Canva has had years to make real. The scenario where this breaks is any team that needs footage-heavy or narrative video; Canva's motion output is clearly motion-graphics-first, and a mid-market company running a product launch film will still be in Premiere. What kills this in 12 months isn't a competitor — it's Canva's own execution: if the brand voice feature is actually just a system prompt wrapper around a commodity LLM with no fine-tuning on your actual content, the differentiation evaporates fast. For now, the distribution moat — every Canva Teams user gets this automatically — is doing more work than the AI itself.

45/100 · skip

The demos are impressive but the generation-to-game-engine pipeline is still manual and lossy. You can't export clean meshes with proper LODs or collision geometry — it's a concept tool, not a production asset pipeline. Until you can import Marble output directly into Unity or Unreal with proper metadata, this stays in the 'cool demo' category for most game devs.

Founder
78/100 · ship

The buyer is the marketing manager or brand manager who already has budget in Canva Teams, which means this has zero new sales motion — it's pure expansion value on existing ARR, which is exactly the right kind of feature to ship. The pricing architecture is sound: bundled into Teams means no friction to adopt, which drives stickiness, and Canva doesn't have to defend a standalone price point against Runway or HeyGen. The moat is the Brand Kit data — every team that uploads their guidelines is training Canva on their own switching costs. The one stress-test that matters: if Adobe ships this natively in Express with Firefly integration, Canva's enterprise positioning gets squeezed, but Canva's SMB base is sticky enough that this is a solid defensive move even if it's not a category-defining offensive one.

No panel take
PM
72/100 · ship

The job-to-be-done is narrow and honest: help a non-video-professional produce on-brand short-form video without leaving Canva or hiring an agency. That's a real, complete job for a specific user — the social media manager at a 50-person company — and the product doesn't overreach by trying to serve a documentary filmmaker. Onboarding is genuinely fast if you already have a Brand Kit set up; if you don't, the first thing you hit is a configuration screen, which is a real friction point for new teams. The completeness question is whether you can actually replace a Canva-plus-CapCut dual-wield, and for sub-60-second social content, the answer is probably yes. The opinion baked into the product — brand consistency is the constraint everything else serves — is the right one, and it makes the tool feel like it was designed by someone with a coherent worldview rather than assembled from a feature backlog.

No panel take
Builder
No panel take
80/100 · ship

Dynamic scale in a single generation pass is the feature I've been waiting for. Having to stitch multiple fixed-extent generations together was the main workflow pain in Marble 1.0 for game environment prototyping. If 1.1 Plus delivers on the demo quality, it cuts 3D world prototyping time by an order of magnitude.

Futurist
No panel take
80/100 · ship

Fei-Fei Li's bet that 3D spatial intelligence is the next fundamental modality is looking more plausible with each Marble update. Dynamic world generation at scale is a prerequisite for training embodied AI agents — Marble's real customer may be the robotics and simulation market, not game studios.

Weekly AI Tool Verdicts

Get the next comparison in your inbox

New AI tools ship daily. We compare them before you waste an afternoon.

Bookmarks

Loading bookmarks...

No bookmarks yet

Bookmark tools to save them for later