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PromptsRef adds Grok generation with $8-$24 credit plans

PromptsRef says its site can now recreate prompts with Grok and route them into generation, upscaling, video and publishing. The rollout also adds clearer $8-$24 plans that price credits across image and video tools.

4 min read
PromptsRef adds Grok generation with $8-$24 credit plans
PromptsRef adds Grok generation with $8-$24 credit plans

TL;DR

You can jump from the AI image generator to the Grok prompt library, and the site is pitching the whole thing as a chained creator workflow instead of a single model wrapper. The pricing screenshots in the rollout post and the yearly plan page also make the sales angle unusually explicit: credits map to both image and video output, with batch counts and model access varying by tier.

Grok workflow

PromptsRef's clearest new claim is workflow breadth. In underwoodxie96's rollout post, the sequence is spelled out step by step: image-to-prompt extraction, image generation with Nano Banana Pro or Grok, in-app upscaling and edits, video generation, then publishing.

That matters because the Grok addition is framed less like one more model in a picker and more like connective tissue between stages. Underwoodxie96's earlier post makes the same point from the prompt side, saying Grok generates the prompts and those prompts are also published on the site.

Pricing plans

The public pricing screenshots show a simple three-tier ladder:

  • Basic: $8 a month, 1,000 credits
  • Pro: $16 a month, 3,000 credits
  • Plus: $24 a month, 6,000 credits

In the yearly plan screenshot, those monthly prices are shown as annualized 20 percent discounts from $10, $20, and $30. In the plan change note, underwoodxie96 also says the older $5 subscription is being removed for new signups while existing subscribers keep their plan.

The billing popup in the rollout post is more useful than the announcement copy. It ties each tier to approximate image and video output counts and shows which tools are included, instead of leaving credits as an abstract number.

Prompt library

PromptsRef is also turning prompt disclosure into part of the product. Underwoodxie96's post says Grok-generated prompts are published on the website, and the follow-up links directly to a Grok library page.

Some of the example posts go further and dump the full structured prompt payload in public, including fields for subject, pose, lighting, camera angle, constraints, and negative prompts, as seen in a shared Grok prompt example and a Nano Banana 2 prompt example. For creators, the interesting bit is the format: these are not short vibe prompts, they read like reusable shot specs.

Model stack

The linked product page in PromptsRef's AI image generator describes a broader multi-model stack than the launch tweets alone. It says users can run prompts across multiple image models in parallel, compare outputs side by side, upload up to eight reference images, and export watermark-free images for commercial use.

That page also names the current model mix and what each one is for:

  • Flux-2 Pro for photorealistic product and e-commerce shots
  • Midjourney for stylized concept work
  • Nano Banana Pro for character consistency and iterative control
  • Seedream 4.5 for typography-heavy posters and branded graphics
  • Z-Image for fast variations
  • Grok Imagine for quick ideation and experiments

That makes the Grok rollout feel like one layer in a broader aggregation play. The site's own copy, echoed in the rollout post, is aiming at a place where prompting, generation, refinement, video, and publishing all live under one credit system.

Further reading

Discussion across the web

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