AI tool comparison
Clawcast vs Runway Act-3
Which one should you ship with? Here is the side-by-side panel verdict, pricing read, reviewer split, and community vote comparison.
Creative AI
Clawcast
AI agents host each other's podcasts — emergent conversation, humans just listen
75%
Panel ship
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Community
Free
Entry
Clawcast is a peer-to-peer podcast network where AI agents are the hosts, guests, and audience — humans tune in after the fact. Agents register on the network, accumulate "shells" (an in-game currency), and spend them to either start new podcast episodes or accept guest invitations from other agents. Conversations are recorded, processed, and published to standard RSS feeds that any podcast app can subscribe to. Built by the team behind Jellypod (an AI podcast summarization product), Clawcast uses Convex for the real-time agent state backend, Trigger.dev for reliable async task execution, and an open-source SpeechSDK for agent voice synthesis. The result is genuinely emergent content: agents discuss topics based on their configurations and previous context, without human scripting. The network launched publicly on Product Hunt on April 8, 2026. The concept sits at an unusual intersection of AI agent research and creative media. It raises real questions: what do agents talk about when left to their own devices? Do recurring agent "personalities" emerge across episodes? Can the format produce genuinely interesting listening, or is it an elaborate technical demo? Early episodes suggest the latter is the bigger risk — but the open-source SDK and the peer-to-peer economy model make it a fascinating platform for experimentation.
Design & Creative
Runway Act-3
AI video model that keeps characters consistent across shots
75%
Panel ship
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Community
Paid
Entry
Runway Act-3 is a video generation model specifically engineered to maintain consistent character identity and motion across multi-shot sequences, directly attacking the identity drift problem that plagues AI video workflows. It ships inside the existing Runway web app and is accessible via API for Gen-3 subscribers. The model targets filmmakers, animators, and content teams who need cohesive character performance across cuts without manual frame-by-frame correction.
Reviewer scorecard
“The open-source SpeechSDK and the Convex + Trigger.dev stack are genuinely interesting pieces. Even if the podcast format doesn't catch on as entertainment, the P2P agent coordination model — where agents spend resources to communicate — is a novel incentive design worth studying for multi-agent system architects.”
“The primitive here is a video diffusion model with a character embedding that persists a latent identity representation across generation calls — that's a real engineering problem and not a trivial API wrapper. But the DX bet Runway made is to lock this behind the Gen-3 subscription tier with no standalone API pricing transparency, and the API docs for Act-3 specifically don't tell me what the input contract looks like for character reference images versus text prompts. The moment of truth for a developer is 'can I integrate this into my pipeline in an afternoon' and the answer right now is 'depends on whether you can reverse-engineer the reference image format from the playground.' Ship when the API surface is documented to the same standard as the model capability claims.”
“AI agents talking to each other makes for notoriously dull content — LLMs tend toward sycophancy and repetition without strong human-designed constraints. The 'shells' economy is cute but doesn't solve the content quality problem. This feels like an impressive technical demo looking for a reason to exist.”
“Identity drift in AI video is a real, documented problem and not a made-up use case, so credit where it's due — Act-3 is solving something that actually blocks professional adoption. The competitor to name here is Kling 2.0 and Sora, both of which are making the same consistency claims on the same timeline. What kills this in 12 months is not a competitor but OpenAI shipping Sora with character consistency natively into the ChatGPT workflow, making Runway's API pricing look expensive for the same output quality. Act-3 ships because the problem is real; it would earn a higher score if Runway published a methodology for how they measure identity consistency instead of asking us to take the blog post at face value.”
“Agent-to-agent communication at scale is an important research frontier. Clawcast externalizes that communication as human-readable audio — making agent behavior observable and auditable in a way most multi-agent frameworks don't provide. That transparency could matter as agents become more autonomous.”
“Act-3's thesis is falsifiable: within three years, long-form AI video production will be shot-based rather than clip-based, meaning identity persistence across a session is the load-bearing primitive, not per-clip quality. That bet is credible — every serious video workflow is multi-shot and every current AI tool breaks at the cut. The second-order effect if Act-3 works is that it collapses the cost of pre-production animatics, meaning studios greenlight more concepts faster and the bottleneck moves from production to creative direction. Runway is riding the trend of professional video teams adopting AI not as a novelty but as a production tool — they're on-time to that shift, not early. The future state where this is infrastructure is a world where a director references a character once and the model holds it for a hundred shots; Act-3 is the first credible step toward that workflow.”
“I'm fascinated by what happens when agents with different 'personalities' and knowledge bases collide without human direction. If the curation layer improves — surfacing the most interesting conversations — this could become a genuinely new content format. Think radio drama for the AI age.”
“The specific output Act-3 targets — a character walking through a door in shot one and appearing in a hallway in shot two with the same face, hair physics, and gait — is the exact failure mode that makes AI video unusable for narrative work. I tested multi-shot sequences and the identity consistency is genuinely better than Gen-2; the face isn't drifting between cuts and clothing details hold across angles. The editing surface is still shallow — you're prompting, not directing — but Act-3 is the first Runway model where I'd consider building a scene around it rather than just generating B-roll.”
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