simpleshow vs Jitter
Side-by-side trajectory, velocity, and editorial themes.
simpleshow ships new mask frames amid explainer-video thought content.
simpleshow is explainer-video creation software with a slow-cadence feed mixing how-to/thought content (training video, agentic talking assistants) with occasional feature posts. The most concrete recent release adds new mask frames that replace static layouts for more creative control.
Editorial leans into a 'talking AI assistant' future for video, while the actual product cadence is light — the clearest shipped change is the mask-frames layout feature. Most entries are L&D and explainer-video positioning.
Expect continued explainer-video and AI-conversation thought content with sparse feature posts; any move into 'agentic'/talking-avatar video would be the notable next step to watch.
Jitter turns its AI effects engine into a packaged panel — and a pricing tier to match.
Jitter is a browser-based motion design tool shipping weekly, and its center of gravity has moved to AI-generated effects. After launching Jitter AI (build custom effects from a prompt) in May, it has consolidated shaders and effects into a dedicated Effects panel and introduced an AI-heavy Ultra pricing tier. Alongside, it keeps expanding the core editor: components, counters, background blur, glass, and displacement shaders.
The direction is clear — grow the effects and shaders library, let AI generate whatever isn't pre-built, and monetize the resulting AI usage through tiered credits. Editor fundamentals such as reusable components, batch export, and timeline UX are maturing in parallel to keep it viable for team workflows. Jitter is positioning as the place where designers both use and generate motion effects without leaving the canvas.
Expect workspace-level components (already flagged as next), a deeper AI effects library, and more usage-based gating as the Ultra tier establishes AI credits as the pricing lever.
See more alternatives to simpleshow →
See more alternatives to Jitter →