Writing environment
Atticus is explicitly marketed around writing and formatting in one author-focused product.
InkVault vs Atticus
Atticus is positioned as a writing and formatting tool for authors. InkVault is being built as a local-first publishing studio focused on manuscript ownership, book layout checks, PDF drafts, EPUB-oriented export and private deployment paths.
Author workflow comparison
Atticus is a strong fit for authors who want an integrated writing and formatting product with templates and broad device access. InkVault is aimed at writers and small publishing workflows that want local project folders, explicit preflight checks, backups and the option to avoid a third-party manuscript cloud.
Comparison
Atticus is explicitly marketed around writing and formatting in one author-focused product.
Atticus emphasizes templates and theme customization for formatting books.
InkVault emphasizes local folders, backups, offline-first work and private deployment choices.
InkVault surfaces practical checks around margins, images, covers, PDF tools and EPUB-oriented validation.
Authors who want an established writing and formatting product with easy templates.
Authors who want book production controls close to their own files and infrastructure.
FAQ
It may be considered by writers who want a local-first book production workflow, but Atticus is already a mature writing and formatting product with its own editor, templates and export flow.
Atticus publicly emphasizes writing, formatting templates, previewing and export for many author workflows. InkVault emphasizes local ownership, export preflight, image checks, backups and optional self-hosted deployment.
Atticus publicly states that authors can create both ebook and print books and export ePub and PDF from the same file.
Next steps
See why InkVault emphasizes local project ownership.
Read the workflowExplore EPUB-oriented manuscript preparation.
Ebook workflowReview the complete InkVault feature map.
Explore features