Turn long content into viral clips. We analyzed the top 5 tools based on speed, cost, and viral potential.
OpusClip is the gold standard for "faceless" channels and podcasters. Its AI scans long videos to find the "hook" (the most engaging part) and automatically adds dynamic auto-captions.
Munch connects to Instagram/TikTok trends. It picks clips based on keywords that are currently trending, giving you higher viral potential.
InVideo generates videos from scratch using text prompts or edits existing footage by typing commands like "Delete silence" or "Add music."
Klap uses OpenAI's logic to find conversational breaks, ensuring clips start and end at natural points. It focuses on speed.
A great budget option for beginners. It doesn't have advanced AI trend analysis, but it cuts clips effectively.
Best free manual editor. Great for when you need granular control over every frame. It is not generative, but it is the industry standard for manual editing.
Download CapCutThe biggest debate in 2025. OpusClip is better for creators who want set-and-forget captions. Munch is superior for marketing agencies who need trend data.
A viral video needs viral audio. If you are creating faceless content with these video tools, you need a hyper-realistic AI voiceover to match.
See Top 5 Voice GeneratorsVideo repurposing is taking long-form content (YouTube/Podcasts) and cutting it into multiple short clips for social media using AI automation.
Generally no. AI tools like OpusClip are trained on viral data, so they often pick clips that perform better than human-selected ones because they use data, not intuition.
Yes, as long as you own the rights to the original video. Using AI to edit does not violate monetization policies on YouTube or TikTok.
CapCut is a manual editor; you decide where to cut. Generative tools like OpusClip watch the video for you and make the decisions automatically.
Hiring an editor costs $100-$300 for 10 shorts. AI tools cost ~$19/month for unlimited or high volume, making them 10x-20x cheaper.