AI tool comparison
Manus Skills vs Perplexity Comet
Which one should you ship with? Here is the side-by-side panel verdict, pricing read, reviewer split, and community vote comparison.
Productivity
Manus Skills
Package your best Manus workflows into reusable, shareable skills
75%
Panel ship
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Community
Paid
Entry
Manus Skills is a new layer on top of the Manus autonomous agent platform that lets users capture multi-step workflows as reusable, parameterized 'Skills.' Once saved, a Skill can be re-run with different inputs, shared with teammates, or published to a community library. Think of it as turning an ad-hoc agent session into a repeatable automation — like a macro, but with LLM intelligence at each step. The feature addresses one of the core frustrations with current agent platforms: every task starts from scratch. Manus Skills lets power users encode their best prompting patterns and workflow sequences into durable primitives. A research Skill might chain web search, source validation, and structured output; a content Skill might handle drafting, image sourcing, and formatting in sequence — all re-runnable with a single input parameter. Launching today as a Product Hunt pick, Manus Skills signals the platform's evolution from a chat-based agent into a workflow automation tool with a community knowledge layer. If the Skills marketplace takes off, Manus could become the Zapier of LLM-native automation — with the added power of reasoning at each step.
Productivity
Perplexity Comet
AI-native browser that autonomously handles web tasks for you
50%
Panel ship
—
Community
Paid
Entry
Comet is an AI-native desktop browser from Perplexity AI that autonomously executes multi-step web tasks including booking, research, and form filling without manual navigation. It integrates Perplexity's search and reasoning capabilities directly into the browsing layer, enabling goal-directed automation across arbitrary websites. Currently invite-only for Pro subscribers, with broader availability planned for Q3 2026.
Reviewer scorecard
“Parameterized agent workflows that actually persist and share — this is the missing piece in nearly every agent platform. The ability to encode prompting expertise into a Skill and share it with a team removes the 'prompt whisperer' bottleneck entirely.”
“Manus still has reliability and hallucination issues in complex multi-step tasks. Wrapping unreliable agent runs into 'Skills' and calling them reusable just scales the failure modes. The community library angle will also inevitably fill with low-quality Skills that break as models update.”
“Comet is competing directly with Arc's Browse, Google's Project Jarvis, and Anthropic's computer-use demos — except those shipped broadly and Comet is invite-only for a Q3 2026 general rollout. The specific failure scenario is obvious: any task requiring login state management, CAPTCHAs, or multi-domain auth handoffs falls apart immediately, and Perplexity hasn't shown evidence of solving those problems at scale. My prediction for what kills this in 12 months: Google ships Gemini-native browser automation in Chrome, erasing Comet's differentiation with zero distribution disadvantage. To earn a ship, Comet needs to demo booking a multi-leg international flight with seat selection, payment, and confirmation — live, unscripted, first try.”
“Composable agent skills are an early step toward a true agent app store. The long-term vision — where the best human knowledge workers encode their expertise into Skills that anyone can run — is genuinely transformative. Manus may not be the final form, but this is the right direction.”
“The thesis here is falsifiable and specific: by 2028, the browser is not a viewport but an execution environment, and the team that controls the AI-browser layer controls the intent graph of the web. Comet is betting on this at the infrastructure level — not bolting agents onto a tab, but rebuilding the browser around the agent primitive. The second-order effect that matters most is what this does to web analytics and SEO: if agents complete tasks without humans seeing pages, the entire attention economy built on pageviews collapses. Comet is riding the computer-use trend line and is roughly on time — OpenAI Operator launched earlier, but browser-native execution versus API-layer automation is a real architectural distinction worth watching. The dependency that has to hold: agentic task completion rates must cross ~85% reliability before mainstream users tolerate it.”
“As a creator who runs the same research-to-draft workflow daily, having a Skill I can launch in one click versus rebuilding it from chat each time is a real productivity unlock. The sharing aspect means I can finally pass my best workflows to collaborators.”
“The buyer here is the $20/mo Perplexity Pro subscriber, which means Comet is a retention feature masquerading as a product launch — there's no incremental revenue attached to it unless Perplexity spins it into a higher tier. The moat question is brutal: Comet's agentic capability sits on top of browser automation infrastructure that Google, Microsoft, and OpenAI are all building simultaneously, and none of them need to charge $20/mo to distribute it. The specific business problem is that Perplexity is spending engineering capital on a browser at exactly the moment when its search revenue model remains unproven — this is a distraction bet that only makes sense if it dramatically increases Pro retention or unlocks enterprise contracts. What would need to change: a dedicated Comet tier at $40-50/mo with verifiable task-completion SLAs and an enterprise sales motion.”
“The job-to-be-done is sharp: complete a web task I would otherwise do manually across 4-8 browser tabs. That's a real, recurring job with measurable time cost, and Comet is one of the first products to attempt it at the browser layer rather than the script or extension layer. The onboarding concern is real though — invite-only access means the vast majority of Pro subscribers can't evaluate whether this replaces their current workflow, making it impossible to call this a complete product today. The opinion baked into Comet is correct: the browser should understand goals, not just URLs. The gap between what's shipped and what's needed is a public availability date that isn't six months away, and documented task success rates so users can set realistic expectations before switching.”
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