AutoAIClips vs Submagic
These two tools solve adjacent problems. Submagic adds polish — animated captions, B-roll, emoji highlights — to a short clip you've already cut. AutoAIClips does the cutting: it takes a 45-minute podcast and gives you ten ranked, captioned, branded shorts. If you only have long-form input and want post-ready output, you want AutoAIClips.
The core difference: input type
Submagic expects you to upload a short clip (usually 15s–3min) that you’ve already cut. It adds animated captions, B-roll, sound effects, and emoji highlights to make the clip pop. It is excellent at that job.
AutoAIClips expects long-form input — a YouTube video, podcast episode, or interview. It ranks the most clip-worthy moments, auto-reframes the speaker to 9:16, burns in word-perfect captions, and renders 10 branded MP4s. End-to-end, no manual cutting.
When to pick AutoAIClips
- You have hour-long source content and no idea which 30s clips will pop. That’s the actual hard problem. Submagic doesn’t solve it.
- You need 10 clips per video, not one. AutoAIClips produces the full top-10 ranked queue in a single job.
- You want multi-aspect (9:16, 1:1, 16:9) in one render.
When to pick Submagic
- You’ve already cut the clip and want caption animation styles or B-roll overlays added on top.
- You want emoji and sound-effect overlays — Submagic’s template library leans into that aesthetic harder than AutoAIClips.
Can you use both?
Yes, and many creators do. Use AutoAIClips to find and cut the top 10 moments from a long-form video. Take the MP4 into Submagic if you want to layer extra B-roll or emoji animations on a specific clip before posting. The two stacks compose cleanly.
Find the clips first. Polish second.
Long-form to 10 ranked, captioned, branded shorts — $9.99/week.
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