Comparison
Krea Alternative on Martini
Krea AI pioneered the realtime canvas — brush-and-see-result image rendering is genuinely faster for solo ideation than any prompt-then-wait flow, and Krea-1 plus Krea Video give it a tight, aesthetic-first house style. Pick Krea when the job is exploratory art-direction or single-screen creative play. Pick Martini when the job becomes a pipeline: storyboard a multi-shot piece, chain image-to-video to lipsync to audio, and hand the cut off to Premiere Pro or DaVinci Resolve from one collaborative canvas.
When to choose Martini
- You need a node canvas that turns a still into a finished multi-shot scene — image to image-to-video to lipsync to NLE export — not a realtime sketch surface.
- You hand off to Premiere Pro, DaVinci Resolve, or Final Cut Pro and want XML/EDL export with timing intact rather than downloading clips one by one.
- You need storyboard mode and script nodes for narrative work — the kind of multi-shot continuity Krea Video does not solve clip-by-clip.
- Your team works together: multiplayer canvas, workspace billing, per-member credit limits, instead of one operator on a Krea seat.
- You want Sora 2, Veo 3.1, Kling 3 / Kling O3, Runway Gen-4, Hailuo, Vidu, and Seedance 2 alongside image and audio models — not just Krea's first-party stack.
When to choose Krea AI
- Realtime ideation is your core loop — Krea Realtime's brush-and-see-result rendering is faster for sketching than waiting on any queued generation.
- Krea-1 and Krea Video are the look you want — first-party models tuned for art-direction control and an aesthetic-consistent house style.
- You're a solo creator who prefers a polished consumer surface (the infinite canvas, Krea Chat) over a node graph and would rather not think in pipelines.
- A single bundled subscription centered on Krea's first-party models is simpler than per-model credit math across many providers.
- Concept exploration and style discovery matter more than handing a finished cut to an editor — Krea optimises hard for the creative-play stage.
Side-by-side comparison
| Attribute | Martini | Krea AI |
|---|---|---|
| Primary surface | Infinite node canvas with multi-step workflows wired between models. | Realtime infinite canvas plus Krea Chat — designed for live ideation, not multi-step pipelines. |
| Realtime ideation | Queued generations on a node graph; not a realtime brush-and-see-result surface. | Krea Realtime is the marquee feature — live image rendering as you sketch and prompt. |
| First-party models | No first-party models; integrates third-party leaders end-to-end. | Krea-1 (image) and Krea Video are trained and hosted in-house with a consistent house style. |
| Model coverage | Sora 2, Veo 3.1, Kling 3 / Kling O3, Runway Gen-4, Hailuo, Vidu, Seedance 2, plus image and audio models. | Krea-1 and Krea Video, plus integrations with select third-party image and video models on the canvas. |
| Multi-step chaining | Visual graph wires any model output into the next — image to video to lipsync to audio in one project. | Strong inside the realtime canvas; cross-modality chaining (image to video to lipsync) is lighter. |
| Multi-shot / storyboard | Storyboard mode and script nodes for multi-shot narrative work in one project. | Krea Video is clip-first; multi-shot continuity is the operator’s responsibility on the canvas. |
| Audio and lipsync | ElevenLabs voiceover nodes plus dedicated lipsync nodes inside the same graph. | Audio and lipsync sit outside the realtime canvas’s core loop today. |
| NLE export | XML and EDL out to Premiere Pro, DaVinci Resolve, Final Cut Pro. | Direct download of generated assets from the canvas; no native NLE timeline export. |
| Team collaboration | Multiplayer canvas, workspace billing, per-member credit limits. | Krea has team usage on its plans, but the realtime canvas is built around a single operator. |
| Pricing posture | Free tier with 100 credits per month; paid tiers transparent and team-aware. | Free trial then a tiered monthly subscription centered on Krea’s first-party models and generation credits. |
Workflow comparison
| Step | Martini | Krea AI |
|---|---|---|
| Brief: a 30-second product story with multi-shot coverage, voiceover, and an NLE handoff | Open one canvas project; place a script node, hero stills, four image-to-video nodes, a voice node, lipsync node, and an XML export node. | Open the infinite canvas; plan to brainstorm stills in Krea Realtime, then queue Krea Video clips and assemble outside. |
| Generate stills with consistent characters | Use Nano Banana 2 or FLUX Kontext with reference inputs for character consistency across shots. | Use Krea-1 or third-party image models inside the realtime canvas; iterate live with the brush and prompt. |
| Animate and shape motion | Mix Runway Gen-4, Sora 2, Kling 3, or Seedance 2 across shots in one graph based on what each clip needs. | Generate shots in Krea Video; cross-model variation means switching models inside the canvas one at a time. |
| Voiceover and lipsync | ElevenLabs voice node plus a lipsync node aligned to clip durations on the canvas. | Step out to a separate audio tool and a separate lipsync tool, then return to align timing. |
| Edit and deliver | Storyboard track plus XML/EDL export into Premiere Pro, DaVinci Resolve, or Final Cut Pro. | Download MP4s from the canvas and rebuild the cut from scratch in your NLE. |
Pricing and operational tradeoffs
- Martini: free tier with 100 credits per month, no card required; paid tiers transparent, team-aware, with per-member credit limits.
- Krea typically offers a free trial then a tiered monthly subscription (Basic / Pro / Max-style) centered on its first-party Krea-1 image model and Krea Video, metered by generation credits.
- Krea's pricing bundles its first-party stack and the realtime canvas, so you don't think in per-model credit math the way multi-model platforms do.
- Martini meters per-model and passes through the underlying model cost — you pay roughly what the model costs whether it's Sora 2, Kling 3, or Runway Gen-4.
- If your workflow leans on Krea-1 and Krea Realtime, Krea's bundle is simpler. If it spans many models, lipsync, audio, and NLE export, Martini's per-credit pass-through usually nets out fairer.
Which to choose by use case
Solo creator exploring style and concept in realtime
Recommendation: Krea
Krea Realtime’s brush-and-see-result loop is the fastest ideation surface today; Krea-1 keeps the look consistent.
Art-director working in Krea’s house aesthetic
Recommendation: Krea
Krea-1 and Krea Video are first-party, tuned for aesthetic control, and bundled into one subscription.
Multi-shot short film or episodic producer
Recommendation: Martini
Storyboard mode, script nodes, and multi-model chaining keep continuity across shots in one project.
Agency post team handing off to Premiere Pro or DaVinci Resolve
Recommendation: Martini
XML and EDL export carry timing into the NLE; Krea’s canvas ends at the asset download.
Team collaborating live on a campaign
Recommendation: Martini
Multiplayer canvas, workspace billing, and per-member credit limits replace shared seats on a single-operator surface.
Related Martini workflows
Related models
Related how-to guides
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Compare with other tools
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Frequently asked questions
- Does Martini have a realtime canvas like Krea?
- No — Krea Realtime is its marquee feature, and the brush-and-see-result loop is genuinely faster for solo ideation than any queued workflow today. Martini is a node canvas: generations are queued and chained, not painted live. If realtime sketching is your core loop, Krea is the better tool; if multi-step production is the loop, Martini is.
- Can Martini match Krea-1 and Krea Video output?
- Krea-1 and Krea Video are first-party models with a deliberate house style — if that aesthetic is exactly what you want, Krea is the cleanest path to it. Martini does not host Krea's first-party models, but it integrates Sora 2, Veo 3.1, Kling 3, Runway Gen-4, Seedance 2, Nano Banana 2, and FLUX Kontext, so you can hit a wider range of looks at the cost of more model selection.
- Why pick Martini over Krea when Krea has its own infinite canvas?
- Krea's infinite canvas is built around realtime ideation — you brainstorm stills, riff, and queue clips. Martini's canvas is built around production: storyboard mode, script nodes, image-to-video chaining, audio and lipsync, and XML/EDL export to your NLE. If the brief ends with a cut delivered into Premiere Pro or DaVinci Resolve, Martini collapses that pipeline; if the brief ends at the canvas, Krea is lighter.
- Does Martini support team collaboration the way Krea does?
- Martini is multiplayer like Figma — multiple editors live on the same canvas, and workspaces add billing isolation, shared model presets, and per-member credit limits. Krea has team usage on its plans, but the realtime canvas is fundamentally tuned to a single operator. For agency or studio teams shipping together, Martini's surface is built for it.
- How does pricing compare to Krea?
- Martini has a free tier with 100 credits per month and team-aware paid tiers; you pay per model and the underlying model cost is passed through. Krea typically offers a free trial then a tiered monthly subscription (Basic / Pro / Max-style) centered on Krea-1 and Krea Video with bundled generation credits. If your workflow leans on Krea's first-party stack, the bundle is simple; if it spans many providers and modalities, Martini's per-credit math usually nets out fairer.
- Can I export a Krea-style project to Premiere Pro or DaVinci Resolve?
- From Krea, you download the generated assets and rebuild the timeline in your NLE. From Martini, you export XML or EDL with clip timing intact, so a multi-shot canvas opens directly in Premiere Pro, DaVinci Resolve, or Final Cut Pro — the storyboard timing rides along.
- I love Krea Realtime for ideation. Can I still use Martini downstream?
- Yes — a common workflow is to ideate stills inside Krea Realtime, then bring the chosen frames into Martini for image-to-video, lipsync, audio, multi-shot continuity, and NLE export. The two tools are not mutually exclusive: Krea is great at the discovery stage, Martini is great at turning a chosen frame into a finished scene.
Try Martini for your next project
Open Martini and wire up your workflow on the canvas. Free to start — no card required.