Rotato vs Jitter
Side-by-side trajectory, velocity, and editorial themes.
Rotato changelog stops in 2023; last release is a crash-fix patch.
Rotato's published changelog goes quiet after August 2023 — the most recent release (142.378) is all crash fixes, preceded by 142.377's animation timeline and sidebar redesign. Earlier releases delivered a template gallery, 8K output, Figma plugin beta, and more device scenes. Whether the product is still shipping outside this changelog is unclear from the visible signal.
From the entries shown, Rotato grew through 2021–2023 with steady scene additions, UI refinement, and ecosystem reach (Figma plugin) before the changelog went silent. The visible direction was toward higher-fidelity mockups and broader integration with designer tools, but there is no recent data to extend that line.
Without recent shipping data, predicting direction is unreliable. If shipping has actually stopped, the product is in maintenance mode; if shipping continues elsewhere, the public changelog is no longer where to look.
Jitter AI lets users describe the creative tool they want — and Jitter builds it inside the editor.
Jitter is in an aggressive shipping cadence focused on what's possible on the canvas itself. May brought two flagship additions: a fully animatable Glass effect with refraction, depth, dispersion, and frost, and Jitter AI — a system where users describe the effect they want and Jitter generates a reusable custom tool right inside the Animate tab. Underneath, the editor is being hardened with batch export, an upgraded pen tool for compound paths, displacement shaders, and corner-radius granularity.
Jitter is moving from 'better motion design tool' to 'AI-extensible motion platform.' The Jitter AI release is the clearest signal of intent — instead of competing on how many built-in effects ship, Jitter is letting users (and teams) generate, refine, and share their own tools by prompt. The rest of the recent work fills in the underlying primitives (shaders, compound paths, granular shape controls) that AI-generated tools need to build on. The product is positioning itself between Figma-style design fidelity and After Effects-style motion fidelity, with AI as the wedge.
Expect Jitter AI to evolve into a marketplace or team library where prompt-generated tools are versioned and shared, plus deeper Figma-import fidelity (the Figma-import polish suggests Jitter sees Figma as the upstream source rather than a competitor). A web-export pipeline for AI-generated effects to ship as Lottie or WebGL components is the obvious next step.
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