DraftProse vs Atticus

DraftProse vs Atticus

Atticus is the tool a lot of self-publishers reach for when the draft is done and the book has to look like a book. It writes and it formats, and the formatting is the part people rave about: clean print and ebook files, professional templates, all from one program you buy once.

DraftProse sits earlier in the process. It is the room you draft in, with a binder for your scenes and a Reader that reads the whole manuscript back to you on pacing, plot, and character voice. It never sets type for a print run, and it never writes a sentence for you.

Atticus if your priority is writing and then formatting a finished book to publish. DraftProse if your priority is drafting and understanding the manuscript, with analysis that never drafts it for you.

Choose DraftProse if

  • You are still writing and revising, and you want structural analysis of the draft more than you want export templates.
  • You want to work in any browser with a free workspace, and add AI analysis only when you want it.
  • You want a Reader that tells you where your pacing clusters and whether a character still sounds like themselves, without generating prose.
  • You will format later in a dedicated tool, or export to Word and EPUB and hand off to a designer.

Choose Atticus if

  • Your manuscript is finished and the job in front of you is typesetting a print and ebook file that looks professional.
  • You want one-time pricing and a single program that takes you from draft to publish-ready files.
  • You self-publish often and live in the formatting and export step, where Atticus is genuinely strong.
  • You do not want AI in the tool at all and want full control of the page layout.
Side by side

The comparison, at a glance.

FeatureDraftProseAtticus
Runs in the browser, any machineBrowser plus offline desktop apps
Free tier for the full workspaceOne-time purchase, no free tier
Manuscript binder of scenes and chapters
Professional book formatting and typesettingWord, EPUB, PDF exportExtensive, its core strength
Whole-manuscript AI analysis (pacing, plot, character)The Reader
AI that generates prose for youNeverNever
Pricing modelFree, then $7 (your key) or $29/moOne-time licence
Your prose used to train a modelNeverNever
Different ends of the same desk

One tool reads the draft, the other dresses the book.

Atticus is built around the moment a manuscript becomes a product. Its formatting engine turns your text into print-ready and ebook-ready files with templates that look like they came from a publisher, and that is what most of its fans bought it for.

DraftProse works on the manuscript itself. The binder holds the scenes and chapters, the editor keeps you in the draft, and the Reader analyses what you have written. The two tools can sit on the same desk: draft and understand in DraftProse, then format the finished file in Atticus.

The Reader

Analysis of the draft, not layout of the book.

Atticus does not analyse your story. It is not meant to. DraftProse does, and only that. The Reader runs across the whole manuscript and reports where dialogue clusters and action goes quiet, gives a structural overview of cast and tension beats, and lets you talk to a character grounded in the scenes you wrote them into.

None of it produces prose. There is no generate button and no rewrite. The Reader hands you back the shape of the draft so you can decide what to change, while the writing stays yours.

Cost

Buy the formatter once, or start the studio free.

Atticus is a one-time purchase, which suits a writer who formats often and wants to own the tool outright. DraftProse is free for the whole workspace, and only the Reader costs money, because running the analysis is a real compute cost.

If you already pay an AI provider, the Studio tier runs the Reader on your own key for a small monthly fee. If you would rather not manage a key, the Pro tier covers the calls. You can draft in DraftProse for nothing for as long as you like.

Quiet questions

DraftProse vs Atticus, answered.

Is DraftProse an alternative to Atticus?
For the writing and analysis stages, yes. DraftProse gives you a browser binder, a free tier, and whole-manuscript AI analysis. Atticus is stronger at the formatting stage, turning a finished manuscript into professional print and ebook files, which DraftProse does not specialise in.
Does DraftProse format books for print and Kindle like Atticus?
DraftProse exports to Word, EPUB, and PDF, which covers most handoffs. It does not aim to match Atticus on fine-grained typesetting and print layout. Many writers draft and analyse in DraftProse, then format the final file in a dedicated formatter.
Does Atticus have AI that analyses your manuscript?
No. Atticus focuses on writing and formatting and does not include manuscript analysis. DraftProse adds AI but restricts it to reading and analysis, never to drafting your sentences.
DraftProse vs Atticus: write and analyse, not format · DraftProse