What we do
Rinzara reviews the AI tools people use to make things: image, video, voice, and music. Our signature format is the bake-off. We write one representative brief per modality, run it through every serious contender, capture the real outputs, and score them on a fixed, published rubric. Then we give a decision-frame verdict, the best tool for each kind of job, because the right pick depends on what you are making.
Generators, scored
Midjourney, Flux, Ideogram, Firefly and more on one brief: adherence, quality, control, price, licensing.
Motion, head to head
Runway, Pika, Luma, Kling, Veo on the same shot: motion quality, control, speed, and real cost.
Reading one script
ElevenLabs, PlayHT, Murf, Cartesia on a fixed script: realism, cloning, dubbing, licensing clarity.
One track brief
Suno, Udio, Soundraw, AIVA on one prompt: quality, structure, and royalty-free commercial use.
How we stay honest
Every tool answers the same brief and is scored on the same rubric, and we publish both. Sponsored placements are always labeled and never change a score; a sponsor buys the featured slot, not the verdict. We add affiliate links only to tools we have tested, and a tool with no affiliate program can still win. We date-stamp every test and re-run it on major model releases, because in creative AI a six-month-old verdict is a stale one. Read the full methodology.
Who runs the tests
Part of a wider network
Rinzara is one site in the DeepSynthesis lattice, a constellation of independent review properties that each own a single buyer cohort. Sisters include Nesyona (the broad AI index), Lucreya (AI tools for revenue teams), and LensPOV (the creator economy). Rinzara owns the consumer creative-AI cohort: the people making things.