Klypse - Klypse v2 - improved reframing and clip editor

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Klypse turns long videos into Shorts, Reels & TikToks automatically — finds the highlights, cuts on sentence boundaries (never mid-word), tracks faces landscape→vertical, scores each clip's hook, and writes captions + social copy. Upload, get 10–15 clips, publish.

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I'm Chris, the maker of Klypse. I built it because repurposing long videos into shorts was eating my whole week — scrubbing timelines, guessing which 30 seconds would land, re-cropping for vertical, captioning by hand. Klypse does the whole thing automatically. Upload a podcast, talk, or long video and it: • finds the strongest moments and scores each one's hook, so the best clips surface first • makes sentence-aware cuts — it never chops a word in half • tracks faces when converting landscape → vertical, so speakers never drift off-frame • writes captions, social copy & a full transcript The part I'm proudest of: it's not a black box. You see exactly what it trimmed and why, and you can adjust anything. Since our first version I rebuilt the editor to be output-first (you see the finished clips right away), sharpened the reframing, and added Fast Cut / Jump Cut / Search modes. There's a free trial, no card needed. I'd genuinely love your feedback — which matters most to you: the hook scoring, the face tracking, or the transparency? I'm here all day

The face-tracking reframing from landscape to vertical is genuinely impressive, especially keeping subjects centered across cuts. The output-first editor feels like the right call too.

Tried Klypse on a 40 min podcast and the sentence aware cuts actually felt clean, no awkward mid word chops like other tools I've used. Face tracking on the landscape clip held up surprisingly well even when two people were talking.

Tried it on a 40-min podcast episode and got 12 clean clips in under a minute. The face tracking through the reframing was surprisingly solid, no awkward crops on whoever was speaking.

The sentence-aware cuts are a really thoughtful touch, nothing worse than a clip that chops a word in half and kills the energy. Love that the editor puts output first instead of forcing everyone through a timeline.

The sentence-aware cuts are a really thoughtful detail, most auto-editors chop right through words and it immediately feels cheap. Glad someone finally obsessed over that.

How well does it actually handle videos with rapid back-and-forth dialogue, like interview clips where two people are talking over each other?