Kitsu vs ClickUp
Side-by-side trajectory, velocity, and editorial themes.
Kitsu is turning its studio pipeline tool into a client-facing review platform.
Kitsu, the open-source animation and VFX production tracker, is investing heavily in the review loop: onion skinning and shape annotations, an annotation eraser, public playlist links that let external reviewers comment without accounts, and client-visible comment toggles. In parallel it added OpenID Connect for studio SSO and production-setup tooling (project templates, retake-count and cross-task-type filters).
The clear direction is external collaboration — pulling clients, supervisors, and vendors into Kitsu's review player rather than exporting frames elsewhere. Enterprise auth (OIDC) and richer annotation tools reinforce a move from internal tracker toward a shared review-and-approval hub.
Expect the guest-review surface to deepen — more annotation fidelity and approval-workflow controls — and further identity/permissions work following OIDC. The cadence points to continued review-platform build-out.
ClickUp bets its future on Brain², a ground-up AI coworker rebuilt to complete work
ClickUp's changelog has shifted almost entirely onto AI. After launching Super Agents in early 2026, it has now rebuilt ClickUp Brain from the ground up as Brain², positioned not as a chatbot but as a context-aware AI coworker that self-improves, routes across models, and completes work: building sites, slides, and managing projects, all under one price. Conventional release notes (Gantt Baselines, Google Drive automations, task-type management) still ship underneath, but they've become the supporting cast to the AI narrative.
ClickUp is repositioning from a work-management app into an AI work-execution platform, with Brain² as the flagship and Super Agents as the autonomous layer beneath it. The messaging (multiplayer AI, every model, one price) targets the model-router and AI-coworker category directly. Expect the roadmap to keep folding traditional PM features into the Brain² surface rather than shipping them standalone.
Expect Brain² to expand across ClickUp's surface area (docs, chat, mobile, and third-party assistants like ChatGPT) and a continued push to make autonomous task completion, not just chat, the headline capability.
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