Compare/Pika 2.2 vs trellis-mac

AI tool comparison

Pika 2.2 vs trellis-mac

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

P

Design & Creative

Pika 2.2

Move, resize, and restyle objects in video without breaking the scene

Ship

75%

Panel ship

Community

Free

Entry

Pika 2.2 introduces object-level manipulation tools that let users move, resize, and restyle specific elements within a generated video scene while preserving visual consistency across frames. The update ships to all Pika subscribers via web app and API, making fine-grained video editing accessible without traditional compositing workflows. It's a meaningful step toward treating AI-generated video as an editable medium rather than a one-shot output.

T

Creative Tools

trellis-mac

Run Microsoft's image-to-3D model natively on Apple Silicon — no NVIDIA needed

Ship

75%

Panel ship

Community

Free

Entry

trellis-mac is a community port of Microsoft's TRELLIS.2 image-to-3D model that runs entirely on Apple Silicon via PyTorch MPS — no NVIDIA GPU required. A single photo goes in, a 400,000-vertex mesh comes out in roughly 3.5 minutes on an M4 Pro, with no cloud dependencies. TRELLIS.2 is one of the strongest open-weights models for single-image 3D reconstruction, producing mesh quality that previously required either expensive NVIDIA hardware or cloud API calls. This port handles the MPS-specific tensor quirks and memory management that make running the model locally on Apple hardware nontrivial. The HN Show HN thread hit 84 points and generated active testing discussion, with multiple users confirming it runs as advertised on M1 Max and M2 Ultra hardware. For 3D artists, indie game developers, and VR/AR creators, the ability to generate production-quality meshes from reference photos on a MacBook is a meaningful workflow unlock. The bottleneck shifts from hardware access to the quality of your reference photography.

Decision
Pika 2.2
trellis-mac
Panel verdict
Ship · 3 ship / 1 skip
Ship · 3 ship / 1 skip
Community
No community votes yet
No community votes yet
Pricing
Free tier / $8/mo Basic / $24/mo Standard / $55/mo Pro
Free / Open Source
Best for
Move, resize, and restyle objects in video without breaking the scene
Run Microsoft's image-to-3D model natively on Apple Silicon — no NVIDIA needed
Category
Design & Creative
Creative Tools

Reviewer scorecard

Creator
82/100 · ship

The output is the thing here: objects actually stay coherent across frames when you reposition them, which is something Runway and Kling have fumbled repeatedly — you'd move a lamp and watch it shimmer into a different lamp by frame 12. Pika 2.2's scene-consistency hold isn't perfect on fast motion but it's genuinely better. The taste layer is a mixed bag: the restyling presets lean toward the obvious (neon, cinematic, sketch) and there's no granular style input, but the defaults are clean enough that you're not fighting the tool. The editing surface is the real win — being able to iterate on a specific object without regenerating the whole scene is the difference between a demo tool and a production tool.

80/100 · ship

As a 3D artist, being able to photo-scan real objects on my Mac without a render farm or API is a genuine workflow breakthrough. The mesh quality from TRELLIS.2 is good enough to use as a base for sculpting and texturing.

Skeptic
74/100 · ship

The category is AI video editing, and the direct competitors are Runway Gen-3 Alpha and Adobe Firefly Video — both of which have made gestures toward object-level control but haven't shipped it cleanly. Pika 2.2 actually ships it, which earns points. The scenario where this breaks is complex multi-object scenes with overlapping depth: try moving a foreground subject past a background element and the consistency model visibly struggles. What kills this in 12 months: Adobe ships a tighter version of this inside Premiere with native timeline integration and Pika's standalone app value proposition collapses for professional users — the consumer segment stays, the prosumer segment migrates. To stay relevant, Pika needs to nail the API story and get embedded in third-party workflows before that happens.

45/100 · skip

The original TRELLIS.2 still runs faster and with higher fidelity on a dedicated NVIDIA GPU. 3.5 minutes is fine for experimentation but too slow for iterative production workflows. Also, single-image 3D reconstruction still has consistency issues with complex objects.

Futurist
78/100 · ship

The thesis here is that AI video stops being a generation tool and becomes an editing medium — meaning the unit of work shifts from 'prompt a clip' to 'compose a scene from manipulable objects.' That's a falsifiable bet: it requires that semantic object understanding in video models continues improving faster than the cost of traditional compositing drops. The second-order effect is significant: if object-level manipulation becomes reliable, the power dynamic between motion designers and clients shifts — clients can now request specific changes without a revision cycle, which either democratizes video production or devalues the motion designer's control over the final frame. Pika is riding the video model capability curve and is roughly on-time — Runway has been here, but Pika's API-first distribution is the differentiator if they execute. The future state where this is infrastructure: every e-commerce product video gets object-swapped for regional markets without a reshoot.

80/100 · ship

This is Apple Silicon democratization in action. The fact that state-of-the-art 3D generation now runs on laptop hardware means 3D assets will be generated ad-hoc at every creative workflow stage within two years.

PM
58/100 · skip

The job-to-be-done is 'edit a specific element in a video without regenerating the whole thing,' which is genuinely one job and that's good. But the product isn't complete enough to replace the current solution — right now that solution is After Effects plus a motion designer, and Pika 2.2 handles maybe 40% of the cases that workflow covers before you hit a wall. Onboarding gets you to the manipulation interface in under two minutes, which is real, but the tool defers too many decisions to the user: there's no guided flow for 'I want to move this object here' that handles the edge cases automatically, so users who aren't already fluent in video production concepts will generate bad outputs and not know why. Ship this when the tool can handle the full job, not just the easy middle 40%.

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

Solid port work — handling MPS tensor compatibility for a model this complex isn't trivial. The 3.5-minute generation time on M4 Pro is competitive and the 400K vertex output is actually usable for game assets without heavy retopology.

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