Tweet Hunter vs ekoreva
Tweet Hunter (also written Tweethunter) is generally known as a tool for writing, planning and scheduling your own tweets and threads, often with some kind of idea bank or inspiration library and analytics on how your posts perform. ekoreva does none of that. It writes replies to other people's tweets, in your voice, in real time. Different job.
We want to be upfront here: we haven't verified every current feature or price of Tweet Hunter, so what follows is the general category it's known for, not a line-by-line spec comparison. If you're evaluating it seriously, check their own site for exact details.
What we do know for certain is what ekoreva is. It's a Chrome extension. It sits in the compose box on X, and when you're replying to a tweet, it reads that tweet, the thread it's part of, and the replies people have already posted under it. Then it gives you three suggested replies written to sound like you specifically, based on roughly your last 500 tweets, each with a voice-match score so you can see how close it thinks it got. No content calendar, no scheduling queue.
Two different problems
Tweet Hunter is aimed at the "what do I post today" problem: coming up with tweet ideas, drafting threads, and getting them out on a schedule. ekoreva is aimed at the "I'm staring at someone else's tweet and don't know how to reply without sounding like a bot" problem. Both are real problems on Twitter/X. They're just not the same problem, and one tool solving the first doesn't mean it solves the second.
| Dimension | ekoreva | Tweet Hunter |
|---|---|---|
| Primary use case | Writing replies that match your voice | Writing and scheduling your own tweets/threads |
| Reply voice-matching from your history | Yes, ~500 past tweets | Not its focus |
| Real-time thread context reading | Yes, reads thread + existing replies | No |
| Post scheduling | No | Yes |
| Content calendar | No | Generally yes |
| Analytics dashboard | No | Generally yes |
| Chrome extension overlay in compose box | Yes | Not its core interface |
| Pricing model | Free tier, then $9-$59/mo, paid in crypto (USDC) | Subscription (check their site for current tiers) |
When Tweet Hunter is the better fit
If your main goal is building an audience through your own original tweets and threads, and you want help planning that out, batching it, and scheduling it in advance, that's squarely their lane. A dedicated content and scheduling tool is the right call there.
When ekoreva is the better fit
If you already spend real time in other people's replies, trying to build relationships, get noticed by bigger accounts, or just keep up with conversations, and you're tired of either sounding like a template or spending five minutes per reply, that's exactly what ekoreva is for. It reads context so it doesn't repeat what's already been said in the thread, and it's tuned to your voice instead of a generic "helpful AI assistant" tone.
Nothing stops you from using a tool like Tweet Hunter for your posts and ekoreva for your replies. They stack, they don't overlap.
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