Peek and Lookie AI share the Lifestyle category. That's where the similarities start. The engagement data below shows where they diverge.
Side-by-side comparison of Peek and Lookie AI based on community engagement data.
AI personal finance coach that guides you through decisions
A faster way to absorb knowledge from YouTube
Peek and Lookie AI share the Lifestyle category. That's where the similarities start. The engagement data below shows where they diverge.
| Category | Peek | Lookie AI |
|---|---|---|
| Artificial Intelligence | - | Yes |
| Lifestyle | Yes | Yes |
| Personal Finance | Yes | - |
| Productivity | Yes | Yes |
👋 Hey Product Hunt! Jeff here—founder, builder, and proud member of Team “Finance Apps Shouldn’t Suck.” Peek was born out of frustration. Most finance apps feel like spreadsheets in drag—cold, confusing, or just plain overwhelming. I wanted something human—like a vibe check for your money. So we bui...
This might be the one I needed to have my finances sorted! Will try this out!
Congratulations on the launch of Peek! It’s innovative to see AI applied to personal finance coaching. How does Peek tailor its check-ins and recommendations to ensure they align with users’ evolving financial goals and habits over time?
👋🏻 Hi Product Hunt community! I'm Steven, the founder of Lookie AI. Lookie is a productivity tool that turns YouTube into your personal knowledge bank! Like many of you, I often turn to YouTube for everything—whether it's travel tips, finding great places to eat, or learning something new for work. ...
As a person who watches a lot of tutorials of different kind, this is gold!
The description for Lookie Ai sounds phenomenal and would truly like to try the iOS app. Two things have halted me wanting to use it - no regular email account option and not iPadOS native unfortunately. Hopefully these two are on a roadmap? Super happy to see the reception you’re getting, this does...
Peek leads on raw interest score. Peek leads on engagement ratio. Peek leads on both metrics. That doesn't happen often.
These products share 2 categories: Lifestyle, Productivity. Moderate overlap suggests they target related but distinct use cases.
Peek is also tagged in Personal Finance, which Lookie AI isn't. That suggests Peek positions itself more broadly or targets an adjacent audience.
Lookie AI has unique category tags in Artificial Intelligence. Different positioning can mean a different buyer profile, even within the same space.
Peek launched Apr 2025. Lookie AI launched Oct 2024. Lookie AI is the veteran here. Peek entered later, with the benefit of watching what worked and what didn't in the category.
Peek has a 0.14 engagement ratio (below average), based on 119 discussion threads across 824 interest points. Low engagement relative to interest means the launch attracted clicks but not conversation. Could indicate the product appealed to a broad audience without hooking anyone deeply.
Lookie AI has a 0.14 engagement ratio (below average), based on 101 discussions across 701 interest points. The low ratio suggests a launch that got attention but didn't convert that attention into sustained interest.
Within the Lifestyle category (285 total products), Peek ranks #1 and Lookie AI ranks #2 by interest score. Peek sits in the top 10 for the category.
Peek is in the top 0% of Lifestyle by interest. Lookie AI is in the top 1%.
Pick Peek if you want the product with the larger community behind it; sustained discussion and active users are your priority; you prefer newer tools with fresher tech; you need something that also covers Personal Finance.
Pick Lookie AI if community size matters less to you than engagement depth; you value stability and a longer track record; you need something that also covers Artificial Intelligence.
Peek: Peek’s AI-powered companion offers proactive check-ins—analyzing your spending patterns and refining your habits subtly and positively. Zero judgment, zero guilt. It’s like having a financial Spotify Wrapped, tuned to your goals and daily life.
Lookie AI: Lookie is designed for consuming knowledge on YouTube, where it often takes too much time and it's difficult to organize key information. With just a simple share, the process becomes 100x smarter and faster, turning YouTube into a personal knowledge hub.
These products also compete in the Lifestyle, Productivity categories:
Cap — Beautiful screen recordings, owned by you. 100% open source. (Interest: 1,064, Engagement: 0.08)
Internet Is Beautiful — Discover the most interesting, weird and awesome websites (Interest: 544, Engagement: 0.17)
Jiffy Reader — Read anything on the internet faster and more clearly (Interest: 502, Engagement: 0.17)
CoPilot.Live — Your personalised AI assistant (Interest: 408, Engagement: 0.49)
Outlit — AI agents for your SaaS deals (Interest: 373, Engagement: 0.23)
Slashit App — Turn your common text into shortcuts and work faster with AI (Interest: 327, Engagement: 0.23)
How directly these products compete. Three or more shared categories means they're going after the same user. One shared category means they approach the space from different angles. Zero overlap and they probably shouldn't be compared.
Comparisons are generated automatically when two products have enough data overlap. If the pair you want isn't here, the products might be in different categories or too far apart in engagement.
Either the product didn't meet our engagement threshold, or it doesn't share enough category tags with the other product to generate a meaningful comparison. We'd rather show no comparison than a misleading one.
Each product's data reflects its launch period. The comparison shows both products' engagement metrics from when they launched. The build date at the bottom of the page shows when the index was last refreshed.
Not yet. Current comparisons use launch-period data only. Post-launch tracking is on our roadmap.
Generally, yes. Engagement ratio is hard to fake. A product can generate artificial interest, but sustained discussion threads require people who actually used the product and had something to say about it.