Compare/Claude for Word vs Gemma Gem

AI tool comparison

Claude for Word vs Gemma Gem

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

C

Productivity

Claude for Word

Claude comes to Microsoft Word — tracked changes, cross-Office context, Teams/Enterprise

Ship

75%

Panel ship

Community

Paid

Entry

Anthropic launched Claude for Word as a public beta on April 11, 2026 — a native Word sidebar add-in available to Claude Team and Enterprise subscribers. It drafts, edits, and revises .docx files inside a persistent panel that stays open alongside your document. Every edit Claude suggests surfaces as a Word tracked change, preserving the native document review workflow that lawyers, analysts, and technical writers already live in. A single conversation thread can span Word, Excel, and PowerPoint, giving cross-document context to tasks like "update the executive summary to match the Q1 numbers in the spreadsheet." This completes Anthropic's Microsoft Office integration trilogy. The tracked-changes output is a thoughtful design decision — rather than replacing document review workflows with an AI that overwrites your work, Claude inserts itself into the existing acceptance/rejection flow that enterprise users trust. Partners in the early access program include large law firms, financial services teams, and technical documentation groups. Claude for Word is available now through the Microsoft AppSource marketplace for Team ($30/user/month) and Enterprise subscribers. Pricing parity with the existing Excel and PowerPoint add-ins is maintained. The launch puts Anthropic directly in competition with Microsoft's own Copilot for Word — a notable competitive position given the existing Anthropic–Microsoft investment relationship via Spark.

G

Browser Extension

Gemma Gem

Run Gemma 4 inside Chrome with zero API keys — pure WebGPU

Ship

75%

Panel ship

Community

Free

Entry

Gemma Gem is an open-source Chrome extension that runs Google's Gemma 4 language model entirely in your browser using WebGPU — no API keys, no server, no data leaving your device. Install the extension, wait for the one-time model download (500MB for the efficient 2B variant, 1.5GB for the larger 4B), and you have a fully private AI assistant that can read web pages, fill forms, take screenshots, and execute JavaScript. The extension uses Hugging Face Transformers.js with ONNX-quantized versions of Gemma 4's E2B and E4B variants, making the model small enough to run in a browser tab without throttling GPU memory. Gemma 4's strong efficiency profile — particularly its per-layer attention architecture — makes it a natural fit for WebGPU's memory constraints compared to older models at similar parameter counts. What makes Gemma Gem interesting beyond the cool factor: it's a glimpse at what fully private, zero-latency browser-native AI looks like. There's no round-trip to a server, no API billing, no rate limits. On a mid-range MacBook M3 or gaming GPU, inference is fast enough to be genuinely useful. The trade-off is capability — Gemma 4 E2B is a 2B parameter model, not Claude or GPT-5, but for summarization, form-filling, and basic Q&A it holds its own.

Decision
Claude for Word
Gemma Gem
Panel verdict
Ship · 3 ship / 1 skip
Ship · 3 ship / 1 skip
Community
No community votes yet
No community votes yet
Pricing
Team ($30/mo) / Enterprise
Free / Open Source
Best for
Claude comes to Microsoft Word — tracked changes, cross-Office context, Teams/Enterprise
Run Gemma 4 inside Chrome with zero API keys — pure WebGPU
Category
Productivity
Browser Extension

Reviewer scorecard

Builder
80/100 · ship

The tracked-changes output is the right call — it fits how enterprise document workflows actually run. Cross-Office context spanning Word + Excel + PowerPoint in one thread is a real productivity multiplier for technical writers producing spec docs with live data references.

80/100 · ship

WebGPU inference in a browser extension is a technical achievement worth shipping just to see what's possible. The ONNX quantization pipeline here is clean and reusable. I'd fork this immediately for any project needing fully offline browser AI.

Skeptic
45/100 · skip

Microsoft Copilot is deeply embedded in Word and cheaper for existing M365 subscribers. Claude for Word requires a separate subscription. The tracked-changes UX is smart, but Anthropic is fighting on Microsoft's home turf with a pricing disadvantage.

45/100 · skip

A 2B parameter model running in a browser tab via ONNX quantization is impressive engineering, but the actual capability is limited. For anything that requires reasoning, current knowledge, or multi-step tasks, you'll hit a wall fast. Fun demo, not a daily driver.

Futurist
80/100 · ship

Anthropic completing the Office trilogy signals a clear enterprise distribution strategy. Claude's constitutional AI and reduced hallucination rate relative to GPT-4o make it a compelling choice for high-stakes document work. The battle for enterprise writing workflows is officially joined.

80/100 · ship

On-device browser AI is the privacy endgame. When models are good enough to run locally in a browser tab, the cloud AI industry faces a genuine disruption threat. Gemma Gem is two years early to the party, but the party is coming.

Creator
80/100 · ship

Tracked changes as the output format means I can accept or reject every Claude edit individually — that's the right level of control for client-facing work. Cross-document context means I can finally ask Claude to make my pitch deck and executive memo consistent in one step.

80/100 · ship

The idea of an AI that reads web pages with me and answers questions without any privacy concerns is huge for creative research. I'm tired of pasting article excerpts into ChatGPT. This should be the default browser experience.

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