ReviewTube / comparisons

Updated June 2026

Dropbox Replay vs ReviewTube: which review tool fits?

Replay is a good product and the cheapest per-user option from a major vendor. Whether it is right for you mostly depends on two things: how deep you already are in Dropbox, and whether your review process needs structure or just comments.

ReviewTubeDropbox Replay
Pricing model Flat per workspace: $19 / $49 / $99 per month$10 to $12 per user per month, as a Dropbox add-on
10-person team $49/mo flat, all in~$100 to $120/mo for Replay, plus the underlying Dropbox plan
External reviewers Unlimited, no accountUnlimited, free
Timecoded comments Yes, frame-accurateYes, with drawing tools
Live co-watch NoYes, patented synchronized viewing
NLE integrations Not yetPremiere, FCP, DaVinci Resolve, Avid
Approval workflow Needs review / sent back / approved per video, visible per projectBasic status, lighter structure
Versions Stacked, full history per videoVersion comparison
Link password + expiry Every plan, rate-limited unlockLimited controls
Voiceover request workflow Built inNo
Storage Own allowance per tier, masters untouchedUses your Dropbox quota
Ecosystem Standalone, nothing else requiredRequires and deepens a Dropbox subscription

Competitor pricing checked against each vendor’s own pricing page, June 2026. Check each vendor for current rates.

Where Replay genuinely wins

Three places, and they are real. Live co-watch: Replay's synchronized viewing session is patented and excellent for directing a remote edit session in real time; we do not have it. Editor integrations: Replay talks to Premiere, Final Cut, DaVinci Resolve and Avid; we have no NLE integrations yet. The bundle: if your team already pays for Dropbox and lives in it, Replay arrives half-installed.

Where the comparison turns

The pricing shape. Replay is cheap per user, but it is still per user, on top of a Dropbox plan that is also per user. A 10-person team pays roughly $100 to $120 a month for Replay alone. ReviewTube Studio is $49 flat for the same team, and the same price at twenty.

Process structure. Replay does comments well. It is lighter on what happens around them: explicit approval states per video, a project view that shows what needs review against what shipped, voiceover request tracking, and password plus expiry on every share link. If your reviews end with a client formally approving deliverables, that structure is the product.

Where your files live. With Replay your masters live in your Dropbox quota, governed by Dropbox terms. With ReviewTube the untouched originals live in your workspace and download free, any time, including the day you cancel.

The plain recommendation

Deep in Dropbox, review loop is informal, you direct edits live: pick Replay. Client approvals, growing team, want review software that is not welded to a storage subscription: pick ReviewTube. The trial is 7 days with no card and holds up to 10 videos and 25 GB of masters, so the cheap answer is to run one real project through it. Pricing is here.

Try it on one real project.

Upload a cut, drop a timecoded comment, send a reviewer link that needs no account. 7-day free trial. No card required.

Founding price: the first 20 workspaces keep launch pricing for life.