Pixlr vs Zencastr
Side-by-side comparison of Pixlr and Zencastr for content creators.
Browser-based photo editing without the software install
Record studio-quality podcasts remotely, no gear needed
What they are
Pixlr
Pixlr is a web and mobile photo editor that covers everything from quick retouches to layered compositions, running entirely in the browser with no download required. It attracts social media creators, bloggers, and small-business owners who need Photoshop-adjacent tools without the Adobe subscription cost. The free tier is functional but ad-supported and now leans heavily on AI features that push users toward paid plans. At $1.99 per month the entry plan is genuinely affordable, though the feature set per tier can feel inconsistently gated.
Zencastr
Zencastr records each participant's audio and video locally on their own device, then uploads separate high-quality tracks to the cloud, eliminating the internet-connection degradation that plagues other remote recording tools. It is aimed at podcasters and interview-based creators who need clean, separated tracks without shipping microphones to guests. The built-in editing, transcription, and podcast hosting features cover the full production workflow in one place, though power editors will still reach for dedicated DAWs.
Which to choose
Full editorial comparison coming soon. For now, check the side-by-side data above and read the individual reviews for Pixlr and Zencastr.