Head-to-head
Adobe Firefly — Adobe's commercially-safe generator inside Creative Cloud. Flux — Open-weights model family from Black Forest Labs with strong photorealism. Below: where each one wins, where each one loses, and where Synexa beats both.
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Adobe's commercially-safe generator inside Creative Cloud. Pricing: Bundled with Creative Cloud. Best for agencies that need indemnified output.
Strengths: enterprise IP indemnity, Photoshop integration, stock-safe training data. Trade-offs: aesthetic feels stock-y, heavy filters, Creative Cloud lock-in.
Open-weights model family from Black Forest Labs with strong photorealism. Pricing: Compute-only via providers. Best for developers wiring the model into custom pipelines.
Strengths: photoreal output, open weights, prompt adherence. Trade-offs: raw model — no UI, gallery or workflow, needs a host, no built-in LoRA training.
If you primarily care about enterprise IP indemnity, Adobe Firefly is the safer pick. If you primarily care about photoreal output, Flux is the safer pick.
In practice, serious creators end up running both — or switching to a unified studio. Synexa combines Flux, SDXL, character LoRA training and AI video in one workspace, with free credits on signup, no watermark and full commercial license on paid plans.
Trust & safety
Your prompts and renders are never used to train models. Ever.
Use renders for campaigns, packaging, editorial and print on paid plans.
Every export is clean — even on the free tier.
One click in Billing. You keep access until the period ends.
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