I've spent a fair amount of time this year actually using these tools for real projects - not just running demos. That changes your perspective fast. The promo videos always look incredible. Actually fitting them into a workflow is a completely different experience.
So here's what's worth your time in 2026, and what's still mostly demo reel.
Runway Gen-3 Alpha
If you need AI-generated video clips that look like they were produced rather than rendered by a 2019 mobile game, Runway Gen-3 is where you end up. Motion quality has improved significantly from Gen-2. Camera movements feel less floaty, subjects hold consistency over longer clips, and background detail is noticeably better.
That said - five seconds is still a realistic usable clip length for most prompts. Go longer and the classic problems appear: fingers merging, faces shifting subtly between frames, physics that only kind of makes sense. For B-roll and short punchy cuts, excellent. For a 30-second sequence with a consistent character? Still not there.
Credits burn faster than you'd expect. Budget for it if you're using it in production.
Pika 1.5
Pika doesn't get talked about as much as Runway but it punches above its weight for specific things. Short animated clips, text animations, product mockup videos - it handles these with less effort than After Effects and the output is surprisingly polished.
The image-to-video feature is where it actually shines. Give it a still image and it animates it convincingly - parallax movement, subtle motion, camera drift. For social content where you have a hero image and want a few seconds of motion, it's faster than anything else I've used. Complex scenes with multiple moving subjects? Not great. Keep it simple.
Descript
While everyone debates AI video generation, Descript quietly became one of the most useful tools for people who actually make a lot of video content. The core idea: your video becomes a document. Edit the transcript, the video edits itself.
Filler word removal works. The "remove silence" feature alone saves serious time on talking-head content. Screen recording built in is good enough to replace standalone tools for most workflows.
Overdub - their voice cloning - works best for fixing a single mispronounced word or adding a corrected line. Replacing whole paragraphs sounds noticeably synthetic. Worth knowing before you start relying on it.
ElevenLabs for voiceovers
Exceptional at what it does. The voice quality on their premium voices is genuinely hard to distinguish from a professional recording in most contexts. For explainer videos, tutorials, consistent narration without booking a voice actor every time - hard to argue against it.
The cloning feature is the compelling part. Upload 3-5 minutes of your own voice and you get a model that sounds like you. Quality depends on your recording environment, but a decent microphone in a quiet room gets you 90% there.
Where it falls down: emotional range. The voices sound polished, but they sound polished in the same way - a smooth, broadcast-adjacent tone that's fine for most things but sounds off if you need something raw or conversational. Pricing also climbs fast if you're generating a lot of audio.
OpusClip for long-form repurposing
If you record podcasts, interviews, webinars, or tutorials and need short-form clips for social without spending hours finding the good bits - OpusClip does this better than anything I've seen.
Paste a YouTube link or upload a file, and it identifies the most engaging moments, cuts them, adds captions, and frames them for vertical video. The AI's judgment on what makes a "good moment" is surprisingly decent. Not perfect. But it finds clips you'd have skimmed past and handles the mechanical work that actually consumes the most time. Captions are clean. Auto-reframing keeps the speaker in frame. For anyone posting 3-4 times a week, the time savings are real.
CapCut - free and actually capable
I know. CapCut is everywhere and the ByteDance ownership makes people nervous. But from a functionality standpoint, it's remarkable what's free here. Auto captions, background removal, voice enhancement, beat sync - implemented well, no subscription required.
For solo creators without a production budget, it's legitimately good. Mobile app is fast and the AI edits work on lower-end phones. Desktop version is more capable but less polished, which is a bit backwards.
The data privacy question is real. For public-facing social content, most people decide it's fine. For anything involving proprietary work or personal footage you actually care about - use something else.
Topaz Video AI
Different category entirely. Topaz isn't generative - it's enhancement. Feed it old, low-resolution, or compressed footage and it upscales using a model trained specifically for video. The results on footage from 2010 or earlier are kind of shocking. 480p content coming out looking like it was shot in HD is wild to see the first time.
It's slow. Very slow without a high-end GPU. Desktop software, $300 upfront. Not for casual use. But if you're working with archival footage or old tutorials you want to republish, nothing else does what it does at this quality level.
Sora - still wait and see
OpenAI's Sora generated enormous excitement when the demo videos appeared. Access is still limited. From what's publicly available and what people with early access have reported, it's capable - but not dramatically ahead of Runway for most practical tasks. The demos are controlled enough that it's hard to judge real-world performance on arbitrary prompts.
Worth watching. Not worth waiting for before building your workflow around something that actually works today.
Real talk: the tools that change how you work aren't always the ones with the best demos. Descript and OpusClip have probably saved more hours for more creators than Runway has, even though Runway gets three times the press coverage. Pick your tools based on what you actually spend your time doing, not what looks most impressive in someone's Twitter thread.