Common Questions
Q: Is Docsie Recorder actually free, or is there a catch?
A: Docsie Recorder is free to download and use for recording, editing, and local export—no account required, no watermark, and no video cap. The only paid component is Video-to-Docs conversion, which uses Docsie AI credits when you choose to send a recording through the Docsie pipeline. If you only need a screen recorder and local MP4/GIF export, the cost is zero.
Q: Why does Guidde cost $44/creator/month just to record the desktop?
A: Guidde tiers desktop capture as a Business-plan feature rather than a baseline recorder capability. The Free and Pro plans ($0 and $20/creator/month) only capture browser tabs via the Chrome/Edge extension. To record a desktop application, a terminal, or your full screen, you must upgrade to Business at $44/creator/month. This is the most common pricing surprise teams discover after signing up for Guidde's lower tiers.
Q: How does Docsie's Video-to-Docs credit pricing work compared to Guidde's per-seat model?
A: Docsie AI credits are consumed per video conversion job—you pay for the work done, not for every person on the team. Guidde charges per creator per month regardless of how many videos that creator actually produces. For a team of ten where only three people record regularly, Docsie's credit model typically costs less than Guidde's per-seat model even after factoring in Video-to-Docs jobs.
Q: What happens when a Guidde Business team needs a sixth creator?
A: The Business plan is hard-capped at five creators. Adding a sixth person requires moving to Enterprise, which has no published pricing and requires a sales conversation. This tier cliff is one of the most cited reasons teams leave Guidde as they grow—there is no gradual scaling option between five creators and a full Enterprise contract.
Q: Can Guidde turn a recording into a knowledge base article the way Docsie Recorder can?
A: No. Guidde produces video tutorials with AI voiceovers and auto-generated step guides displayed alongside the video, but it does not convert recordings into exportable Markdown, DOCX, or PDF documentation or publish them into a versioned knowledge base. Docsie Recorder's Video-to-Docs pipeline takes the same recording and generates structured documentation that can be published, versioned, translated, and delivered through Docsie portals.
Q: Is Docsie Recorder a good Screen Studio or Loom alternative for teams on a budget?
A: Yes. Docsie Recorder covers the core capabilities that make Screen Studio popular—zooms, backgrounds, cursor polish, motion blur, crop, trim, and clean MP4 export—across macOS, Windows, and Linux at no cost. Unlike Loom, the output is not just a share link or an AI summary. The recording can be converted into structured documentation through Docsie's Video-to-Docs pipeline, making it a stronger fit for teams whose recordings need to become reference documentation rather than one-time walkthrough videos.
Deep Dive
Beyond the headline numbers, the real cost difference between Docsie Recorder and Guidde shows up in value for money at each tier, how costs scale with team size, and the hidden limitations that force upgrades or tool additions.
Docsie Recorder is free at the recorder level with no feature gating, no watermark, and no seat count—every user on any platform gets the full recording and editing suite including zooms, backgrounds, annotations, blur, crop, trim, and local MP4/GIF export. Guidde's free tier is limited to 25 videos, adds a watermark, and blocks all downloads, making it unsuitable for production use. To get MP4 export and blur tools from Guidde you need the $20/creator/month Pro plan. To get desktop capture at all, you need the $44/creator/month Business plan. Docsie Recorder delivers more recorder capability at zero cost than Guidde's paid tiers deliver at $20–$44 per seat.
Guidde's per-creator model means a five-person team on Business pays $220/month just for desktop capture access, and the plan is hard-capped at five creators—a sixth creator forces an Enterprise negotiation. Docsie Recorder has no per-seat fee at the recorder layer. Video-to-Docs conversion scales on AI credits consumed rather than headcount, so a ten-person team that records two tutorials a week pays for those conversions, not for ten seats. At twenty or fifty users the cost difference compounds significantly. Teams choosing Docsie Recorder avoid the cliff edge where adding one more creator forces a tier jump or a sales conversation.
Guidde hides two meaningful costs in its tier structure. First, desktop capture—which most buyers assume is standard in any screen recorder—requires the Business plan at $44/creator/month, not the $20 Pro plan. Second, auto-translation is Enterprise-only with no published price, adding cost for multilingual teams. On the Docsie Recorder side, the hidden cost is the Docsie platform subscription needed to publish generated documentation into a managed knowledge base—though the recorder itself and local exports remain free. Teams should budget Docsie AI credits for Video-to-Docs jobs but will not pay per seat for the recorder. The net position: Docsie Recorder's hidden costs are additive and usage-based; Guidde's are structural and headcount-driven.
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