October 1st, 2025
OpenAI's TikTok Killer
This newsletter was brought to you byGetViktorFeeds Made of Prompts
gm legends, happy Wednesday.
Here’s today’s lineup: OpenAI’s Sora 2 comes with a TikTok-style app where every clip in the feed is AI-generated, complete with cameo slots for your face if you opt in; Verdent Deck runs multiple coding agents in parallel and gives you clean diffs so you actually see what changed; CrePal turns your ideas into short films by handling the script, scenes, edits, and audio from a single prompt.
P.S. Building something new? Tell us about it → editorial@producthunt.co 🫶
TikTok, but All Fake

OpenAI’s new drop has two parts. First, Sora 2, a video model that can spit out high-quality short clips from prompts. Second, an actual TikTok competitor where every single video in the feed is AI-generated. You can even hand over your face for cameos, which means strangers’ prompts can star… you.
🔥 Our Take
This isn’t just a model upgrade, it’s OpenAI building an entertainment machine. The idea of a feed where nothing is real feels equal parts brilliant and cursed. On one hand, it kills the excuse of “I don’t have time to make content.” On the other, do we really want infinite AI skits starring our friends’ faces? Feels like the uncanny valley just got its own social network.
Where’s the IDE Crown in 2025?

fmerian asks: Poll: Best IDE in 2025? He tees it up with the Stack Overflow survey and asks what people actually use day to day. The thread leans VS Code for stability and extensions, with strong pockets for Cursor and Claude Code, and JetBrains when language depth matters. The subtext is simple: code editors are identity as much as tooling.
We asked 34 customers what Viktor does for them. Not one said chatbot.

They kept using words like colleague, coworker, team member. One CEO called it the glue holding their e-commerce business together, which is a lot, but also… you see why. It lives in Slack and plugs into 3,000+ tools, so instead of jumping between tabs, you just ask for the thing. Pull Stripe against HubSpot, check Sentry alerts, spin up a campaign brief, build a landing page, send a report upstairs. It all happens there.
It has already hit top 5 on Product Hunt with 130 comments, is SOC 2 certified, and your data does not train models.One user said it was the first time AI felt like a real coworker, which is either exciting or slightly concerning depending on your week.
Parallel Agents, Real Code

Verdent Deck coordinates multiple AI agents to attack coding projects in parallel. You fire off a rough idea, it checks in with you, builds a plan, then spins up agents to generate, review, and refine code all at once. Everything is transparent, you see the diffs, you see what changed and why. It supports GPT-5, Claude Sonnet 4.5, and other models so you pick what powers your stack.
🔥 Our Take: Running agents in parallel feels like sending clones to do your work. The clever part here is giving you visibility and control, so you don’t end up in “which agent screwed it up” hell. If you’ve ever watched a coding tool spit out garbage you’re too scared to touch, this one at least gives you eyes on it.
Movies From a Prompt

CrePal is your AI director. You type in an idea, and CrePal handles the rest, script, storyboard, scene generation, edits, to turn a prompt into a short film. It blends models, tools, and sub-agents so you don’t have to mess with all the pieces.
🔥 Our Take: You don’t need to learn every video tool, you need someone (or something) to get it done. CrePal tries to be that. It’s not about replacing directors, but giving storytellers a shortcut when they just want to see their vision on screen without wiring every part themselves.
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