Flowcase vs Navattic: demo videos or interactive tours
A demo video you can post anywhere, or a clickable tour visitors step through on your site. Here is how the two approaches differ and when to reach for each.
Both tools turn your product into something you can put in front of a buyer, but they hand you different things. Navattic is known for interactive product tours: clickable, embeddable walkthroughs a prospect can step through on your site. Flowcase points at your app's URL and renders a finished demo video, a polished MP4 you can publish anywhere.
This page lays out how each approach works and when one fits better than the other, so you can pick the right one for the job in front of you, or use both.
One artifact, many channels
A finished MP4 drops straight into a launch tweet, a sales email, a YouTube pre-roll, or a deck. No embed script or hosted page required.
The camera does the work
Auto-zoom eases into each click and field, then pulls back out, so viewers always look exactly where the action is.
Record as a logged-in user
Save a session once on the Connections page and Flowcase captures your real, authenticated app without ever seeing your password.
Plain English in, polished video out
Describe the flow in a sentence or give exact scripted steps. The agent plans the run while a director pass paces it into named scenes.
Two ways to show a product
An interactive product tour captures your interface and turns it into a guided, clickable experience. A visitor lands on it, clicks through the steps, and explores at their own pace. That is the lane Navattic is widely known for, and it shines when the tour lives on your website or inside a trial.
Flowcase takes the other route. You give it your app's URL and a description of the flow, and it returns a video. The viewer presses play and watches a clean, paced run of your product instead of driving it themselves. The output is an MP4, so it goes wherever video goes.
How Flowcase builds the video
Describe the flow in plain English and the AI agent plans the clicks and typing, then captures a clean run. Prefer exact control? Hand it scripted steps instead: click this, type that, confirm the result.
A director pass groups the raw clicks into named scenes with timing and importance, the way an editor lays out a timeline. Auto-zoom eases the camera into each click and field then back out, the cursor moves on smooth eased paths, and captions are generated automatically. Everything renders in the cloud, up to 4K, with nothing to install.
Where each one fits
Pick an interactive tour when the goal is hands-on exploration on your own pages: a prospect poking around a guided experience before a call, or a self-serve walkthrough inside onboarding. That kind of clickable engagement is exactly what tour platforms are built for.
Pick Flowcase when you need a portable artifact. A launch announcement on X, a pre-roll on YouTube, a clip in a cold email, an app store preview, or a slide in a board deck all want a video file, not an embed that only renders in a browser. A video also plays the same way every time, which matters when you are pitching.
Recording your real, logged-in app
Most product flows that matter live behind a login. Flowcase handles that with authenticated capture: save a login session once on the Connections page and it records as your account, showing real screens with real data, and it never sees your password.
That means the demo reflects what users actually experience, not a stripped-down public page, without you re-recording every time your UI shifts.
Frequently asked questions
- What is the difference between Flowcase and Navattic?
- Navattic is known for interactive product tours: clickable, embeddable walkthroughs that let a prospect step through a captured version of your product at their own pace. Flowcase produces a finished demo video, an MP4 rendered in the cloud with auto-zoom, eased cursor motion, and captions. One gives visitors something to click. The other gives you a file to publish. Many teams use both.
- When should I choose an interactive tour over a demo video?
- If your main goal is letting prospects explore hands-on inside a guided experience on your site, before a sales call or during a free trial, an interactive tour platform like Navattic is a strong fit. Reach for Flowcase when you need a self-contained video for a launch post, a YouTube ad, an email, an app store listing, or a slide where a clickable embed will not play.
- Can Flowcase record a flow that needs a login?
- Yes. Save a login session once on the Connections page and Flowcase records as your account. It captures the authenticated screens without ever handling or storing your password.
- Do I need to script every click for Flowcase?
- No. Give the AI agent a plain-English goal and it plans the clicks and typing, then captures a clean run. If you want precise control, scripted steps are fully supported: click this, type that, confirm the result.
- What resolution and length can I render?
- The free plan renders 3 minutes per month at 1080p with a watermark. Paid plans remove the watermark and go up to 4K: Starter is 1080p, Pro is 1440p with AI agent demos, and Scale is 4K with API access. Paid plans bill pay-as-you-go per second over the monthly pool.
- Is there anything to install?
- No. Flowcase runs in the browser and renders in the cloud. There is no desktop recorder, no plugin, and no screen capture session to babysit.
Keep exploring
Render your first demo free
Point Flowcase at your app, describe the flow, and get a polished MP4 back. The free plan renders 3 minutes of demo every month at 1080p, no card needed. Run one flow and see how the video reads before you decide.
3 min of rendered demo free every month · no card needed