Both products target creators who sell digital goods, and on paper they look alike. In practice the gap is about cost and speed: Product A starts free and takes a 3% cut, while Product B costs $12 a month and takes 5%. Under a few thousand a month, that difference compounds fast.
Where Product A pulls ahead
The free tier lets you start without a card, and payouts land in one to two days instead of three to five. For a creator living on cash flow, getting paid twice as fast matters more than any feature list. That kind of edge only shows up once you run real money through both — which is exactly how we test.
Where Product B earns its price
Product B is not simply the worse deal. Power users who need its advanced features, and can absorb the higher fee, get a more capable platform. If that is you, price stops being the headline. For the full picture on one side, see our hands-on Product A review.
Who should pick which
Pick Product A if price and payout speed decide it — that is most people. Pick Product B only if a specific advanced feature is non-negotiable. If you are torn purely on cost, it is the same call as free vs paid, in miniature.
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