A new AI voice platform called Omni Voice has launched, offering voice cloning and text-to-speech generation. The product sits in one of the most crowded corners of AI tooling right now, competing against established players like ElevenLabs, Murf, and Descript's voice features.
Voice cloning works by training a model on a short audio sample - often just a minute or two of someone speaking - and then generating new speech in that person's voice from any text you input. The quality gap between tools in this category has closed dramatically over the past 18 months. In 2024, you needed to spend real money to get results that didn't sound robotic. Today, even smaller platforms can produce usable output.
The practical uses are real: podcast hosts dubbing episodes in multiple languages, content creators maintaining a consistent voice across videos, businesses building customer service audio without hiring voice actors. The harder question is whether Omni Voice offers something the big players don't, on pricing, quality, or workflow. Without a published pricing page or independent benchmark comparisons at launch, that's difficult to assess.
For anyone evaluating TTS tools right now, the category standard to beat is ElevenLabs - their voice quality and API access set the bar for professional use. A new entrant needs a clear answer to why you'd switch.