Best AI for every task
Which model actually wins for resume writing, coding, logos, video ads, and 44 other tasks? Each pick is backed by real StudyAIMastery playground runs — not vibes.
Text & writing
Resume writing
Which AI model writes the cleanest, most ATS-friendly resume? Compared on real prompts.
Cover letters
The model that writes a cover letter sounding like you wrote it — not a template.
Coding
Which model writes the best code right now? Real benchmark data plus playground runs.
Debugging code
Stuck on a stack trace? See which model spots the bug fastest.
Code review
A second opinion on your PR — the model that catches what your teammate would.
SQL queries
Which AI writes correct, efficient SQL on the first try?
Essay writing
For long-form prose with structure and voice, not just word salad.
Blog posts
Which model writes blog posts that don't scream "AI wrote this"?
Email replies
For replies that sound like you wrote them — fast, on tone, not robotic.
Summarizing articles
Which model gives the cleanest summary without dropping the thesis?
Social media captions
Captions that read like a person, not a brand. Spans Twitter, LinkedIn, IG.
Translation
Which model handles idioms, tone, and rare languages best?
Research
For literature review, source synthesis, and finding the gap. (Not for live web search — see Perplexity.)
Brainstorming
Which model gives you ideas you wouldn't have had — vs. the obvious five?
Data analysis
Pasting a CSV or table — which model gives real insights vs. just describing the data?
LinkedIn profile
For headlines and About sections that don't sound like every other "results-driven professional."
Presentation slides
For deck outlines, slide-by-slide text, and speaker notes that don't sound generic.
Meeting notes
For turning a transcript into actions, decisions, and a one-paragraph summary.
Product descriptions
For e-commerce listings — Amazon, Shopify, Etsy. The model that converts vs. just describes.
Study notes
For turning a textbook chapter or lecture into flashcards, outlines, and study guides.
Fiction writing
For drafting prose, dialogue, and scenes — the model with actual literary instincts.
Workout plans
For strength, hypertrophy, or beginner programming — the model that knows the difference.
Travel itineraries
For day-by-day plans that don't overpack or recommend the obvious tourist traps.
Lesson plans
For teachers who need a standards-aligned plan with objectives, hook, activities, and assessment — not a vague outline.
Cold emails
For outreach that doesn't open with "I hope this email finds you well" — short, specific, and human enough to get a reply.
Grant writing
For proposals and LOIs that hold a logical argument across every section and match the funder's language — not a wall of nonprofit jargon.
Business names
For a name shortlist that's actually usable — pronounceable, not a forced pun, with a plausible .com — not 100 throwaways.
Interview prep
For a realistic mock interview that asks follow-ups and gives honest feedback on your answers — not a list of questions you already googled.
Excel formulas
For the formula that actually works on the first paste — nested IFs, INDEX/MATCH, XLOOKUP, dynamic arrays — with an explanation if you want it.
D&D campaigns
For a Dungeon Master who needs a coherent world, NPCs that stay in character, and encounters that are actually balanced — not a generic fantasy mad-lib.
Ad copy
For headlines and primary text that lead with one benefit and fit the character limit — not adjective soup that gets disapproved.
YouTube scripts
For a script with a hook that survives the first 30 seconds, open loops that hold retention, and a voice that sounds spoken — not read.
Wedding speeches
For a best-man, maid-of-honor, or parent toast built around YOUR stories — warm, a little funny, and not a Hallmark card read aloud.
Image generation
Logo design
Which AI image model produces usable logos vs. generic mascot art?
Professional headshots
Which model produces a portrait that looks like a real LinkedIn headshot vs. obviously synthetic?
Product photos
For e-commerce shots, lifestyle composites, and packaging mockups.
Social media graphics
For carousel slides, quote graphics, and Instagram-shaped content.
YouTube thumbnails
For the 1280×720 image that decides whether anyone clicks. High-CTR thumbnails or nothing.
Illustrations
For editorial art, blog headers, and decorative illustration — vector-feeling without being flat.
Book covers
For a cover that reads its genre at thumbnail size and leaves room for the title — not a busy illustration nobody can parse on a phone.
Tattoo designs
For clean linework an artist can actually use as a reference — fine-line, blackwork, illustrative — not a muddy render that falls apart at stencil size.
Coloring pages
For clean black-outline-on-white line art with no shading — printable pages for kids or detailed adult coloring books.
Interior design renders
For photoreal room concepts with believable lighting, proportions, and materials — to show a client or picture your own redesign.
Video generation
Video ads
Short-form video ads for TikTok, Reels, and YouTube Shorts — which model holds up?
Explainer videos
For B-roll, abstract concept visualizations, and animated metaphors.
Product demos
For 5-15 second clips showing your product in use — landing pages, ads, App Store previews.
Reels & TikToks
For short vertical clips you can iterate on cheaply — the 3-second hook shot, the B-roll, the visual the trend needs — without burning your budget.
YouTube intros
For the 3–6 second branded open — ideally with the sound built in — that's the same every video so people recognize your channel.
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