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Comparison · Design

Kittl vs ComfyUI

Side-by-side trajectory, velocity, and editorial themes.

K
Kittl
DESIGN
7.5

Kittl goes agentic: design by intent, with the tools you use wired in.

◆ Current state

Kittl is a browser-based design tool that has moved aggressively into AI-native creation. Its weekly product-update cadence carries steady craft improvements (brand kits, on-brand generation), but the last two headline releases are directional: an Apps panel that pulls external tools into the canvas, and now an Agentic AI mode that shifts creation from manual prompt-and-parameter tuning toward stating intent and letting the system drive. Kittl is compressing the distance between idea and finished design.

◆ Where it's heading

The product is consolidating the whole design workflow inside one surface — first by integrating outside tools (Apps), then by automating the decision-making inside creation (Agentic AI). Together they point at Kittl as an AI design environment where the user sets direction and the agent handles model, format, and style choices, with connected services feeding assets and distribution.

◆ Prediction

Expect Kittl to widen the Apps ecosystem and give the agent more reach — chaining multi-step design tasks and acting across the connected apps rather than generating single artifacts.

C
ComfyUI
DESIGN
6.3

ComfyUI keeps day-zero model support table stakes while opening itself to AI agents via MCP

◆ Current state

ComfyUI has settled into a rhythm of near-immediate integration for every new image and video model — Seedream 5.0 Pro, Seedance 2.0, HappyHorse 1.1, Krea 2, and Ideogram 4.0 all landed within weeks of their release. The graph editor is now the default surface where practitioners test frontier models before committing to a pipeline. Its late-June Comfy MCP release extends that surface from humans to coding agents.

◆ Where it's heading

Being first to support a model is no longer the story; it is now baseline expectation for ComfyUI. The more consequential shift is positioning the tool as programmable infrastructure — an MCP server, a public API that a solo developer turned into a mobile app in a week, and an agent-driven code-review pipeline internally. ComfyUI is moving from an app you click toward a backend other software drives.

◆ Prediction

Expect day-zero model drops to keep pace, but the differentiating investment will be the agent and API layer — more MCP tooling and cloud endpoints that let external apps and agents run Comfy workflows without touching the canvas.

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