Document Workspace
ScribleSketch vs Notion
Compare ScribleSketch and Notion. Why a general-purpose block editor with templates can host content but cannot compose it — and what changes when the AI knows the block catalog, theme system, and your intent at once.
ScribleSketch composes — Notion blanks. You describe intent and the AI produces a styled, multi-format artifact across notebooks, slides, and resumes. Notion gives you a page and a cursor.
Side by side
The axes that matter
Axis
ScribleSketch
Notion
Composition vs blank canvas
Chat-first composition — the AI assembles typed blocks against your intent and theme.
Blank page + cursor. Templates exist, but composition is manual.
Theme system depth
Tokens (palette, type ramp, density, paper) resolve at render time across six profiles.
Per-page colors and cover images; no token system, limited typography control.
AI integration
AI is the composition engine — every block can be composed, refined, regenerated.
Notion AI is a sidebar — it returns text, you place and style it yourself.
Multi-format output
Notebook, slides, resume from one source. PDF, PNG, GIF, MD, HTML, JSON exports.
Pages export to PDF / HTML / Markdown. No native slide deck or resume surfaces.
Slide / deck support
Slides are a view of the notebook — chopped on H1, speaker notes, GIF export.
No first-class slide surface; community templates approximate decks.
Pricing model
Free workspace · Pro $12/mo with 7-day trial · Studio $24/mo · Team $8/seat/mo.
Free for individuals (limits). Paid plans for collaboration. AI is a separate add-on.
The honest takeNotion is good at what it does.
Notion is good at what it does.
ScribleSketch is doing something different.
Notion is excellent for collaborative docs, wikis, and lightweight databases. ScribleSketch is for the moment when you'd rather describe a study sheet, a slide deck, or a recipe journal than build it from a blank page. If you want long-form, themed, multi-format composition with AI as the engine, ScribleSketch is the tool.