AI tool comparison
Layered vs Runway Gen-4 Video Editor
Which one should you ship with? Here is the side-by-side panel verdict, pricing read, reviewer split, and community vote comparison.
Creative
Layered
Selfies build your closet — AI recommends outfits from what you already own
50%
Panel ship
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Community
Free
Entry
Layered is an iOS app that builds a digital wardrobe from your selfies rather than requiring you to photograph every item individually. Point your camera at yourself, and the AI reads your outfit to catalog what you own — a radically lower-friction approach to wardrobe digitization that most closet apps get wrong by making it too much work to set up. Once your wardrobe is catalogued, Layered becomes a daily outfit advisor: it recommends combinations from what you already own, generates Pinterest-style lookbooks for new pieces you're considering, and creates travel packing capsules calibrated to destination, weather, and luggage constraints. Cost-per-wear tracking surfaces clothes you're ignoring, making decluttering data-driven rather than intuition-based. Built by indie iOS developer Vadim Drobinin, Layered launched on Product Hunt and immediately hit the top five. It's a freemium app — free to start with paid unlocks — and represents the kind of thoughtful, focused indie product that succeeds by solving one problem better than anyone else rather than trying to be everything.
Design & Creative
Runway Gen-4 Video Editor
AI video generation with real-time collab and motion brush control
100%
Panel ship
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Community
Free
Entry
Runway's Gen-4 platform now supports real-time multi-user collaboration, letting creative teams work simultaneously on AI-generated video projects. A new motion brush tool gives users granular object-level animation control, and temporal consistency improvements mean clips longer than 10 seconds hold together better. This positions Runway as a serious production environment rather than a solo experimentation sandbox.
Reviewer scorecard
“The core insight — read outfits from selfies instead of making users photograph items — is a genuine UX breakthrough for this category. Every other closet app dies in onboarding. Layered solves that. Solid indie execution from a developer who clearly uses the product.”
“Selfie-based wardrobe reading sounds elegant but breaks down on layering, partial outfits, and anything not visible in a selfie (jeans, shoes, bags). The AI accuracy for attribute tagging in real-world lighting conditions is almost certainly worse than the demo. Fashion AI has been over-promised for a decade.”
“Real-time collaboration in an AI video tool is genuinely differentiated — Pika and Kling don't have it, and Adobe's Firefly Video still treats multi-user as an afterthought. The scenario where this breaks is any team above 5 people with a real review-and-approval workflow: there's no version history, no comment threading, no asset management. It's Google Docs collaboration bolted onto a generation tool, not a production pipeline. What kills this in 12 months isn't a competitor — it's that the collaboration feature stays shallow while teams need it to go deep. But the motion brush is a genuine primitive improvement, not a marketing slide, and that's enough to ship.”
“Sustainable fashion is a $15B opportunity and AI-powered wardrobe optimization is finally good enough to make a dent in overconsumption. Apps like Layered that show you what you already own and compute cost-per-wear are quietly more consequential than they appear.”
“The thesis here is that AI video generation becomes a collaborative production layer — not a solo prompt box but an environment where a director, VFX artist, and editor work simultaneously on synthetic footage. That's a falsifiable bet: it requires that teams adopt AI-generated footage as a primary production input rather than a supplementary effect, which currently only a narrow slice of creators do. The second-order effect that matters isn't the collaboration feature itself — it's that real-time collab creates artifact provenance questions nobody has solved yet: who made what, which generation prompt is canonical, how do you credit a collaboratively prompted clip. Runway is early to collaboration-as-infrastructure and on-time to the temporal consistency problem, which is the actual gating factor for professional adoption.”
“As someone who genuinely wrestles with 'I have nothing to wear' syndrome, this is the app I've wanted for years. The travel capsule generator alone is worth installing — packing for a week trip without overpacking is a real skill gap that AI can fill.”
“The motion brush is the feature I didn't know I needed — painting directional movement onto a specific object without it bleeding into the background is the kind of control that separates 'AI slop' from 'actually usable footage.' The output fingerprint is still there if you look for it: that slightly uncanny softness on fast motion, the way Gen-4 handles cloth physics a beat too perfectly. But the temporal consistency fix for clips over 10 seconds is real — I stopped getting that weird structural drift at the 8-second mark that made longer takes unusable. The specific craft decision that earns the ship: motion brushes delegate taste back to the user instead of making every clip look like a Runway clip.”
“The job-to-be-done just expanded from 'generate a video clip' to 'produce video with a team,' and that's a meaningful product leap — but the onboarding for the collaboration feature is unfinished. Getting a collaborator into an existing project requires sharing a workspace link through settings buried two levels deep; a user reaching value in under two minutes is not happening for first-time collaborators. The motion brush earns its place because it maps to a real editing job creators already have: 'move this thing but not that thing.' The specific product decision that earns the ship is temporal consistency at 10+ seconds — that's the threshold where Runway clips were previously unusable in real cuts, and fixing it makes the tool completeable for an actual production workflow without needing a second tool.”
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