Gaffa vs Playwriter

Side-by-side comparison to help you choose the right AI tool.

Scrape and automate the web with a chill API, no coding drama needed.

Last updated: March 1, 2026

Playwriter logo

Playwriter

Control Chrome with AI via CLI or MCP.

Visual Comparison

Gaffa

Gaffa screenshot

Playwriter

Playwriter screenshot

Overview

About Gaffa

Alright, data hustlers, gather 'round. Ever felt like getting web data at scale is a total nightmare? Like, you're just trying to automate some browsing or scrape a site, but you're instantly hit with a wall of nonsense: headless browser configs, proxy management, scaling headaches, and CAPTCHAs that make you want to scream. Yeah, we've been there. That's why Gaffa exists. Think of Gaffa as your ultimate web automation wingman. It's a one-stop-shop, no-code API that takes all the annoying, complex tech stuff off your plate. You just tell it what to do via a simple REST API, and it handles the rest—real browsers, residential proxies, scaling, data parsing, you name it. Whether you're a marketer hunting for leads, a data scientist building a dataset, or a developer automating boring tasks, Gaffa lets you focus on the actual work while it does the digital heavy lifting. It mimics real human behavior (scrolling, clicking, the works) to get past bot defenses and delivers clean data in formats you crave, like JSON, markdown for your LLMs, or even full-page screenshots. Stop building and maintaining fragile scraping pipelines. With Gaffa, reliable web data is finally a walk in the park.

About Playwriter

AI agents cannot browse the web properly. They either have no browser access, or they get a fresh Chrome with no logins, no extensions, and instant bot detection. Playwriter gives them your actual browser session instead. One Chrome extension, full automation API, everything you are already logged into. Includes accessibility snapshots (5-20KB instead of 100KB+ screenshots), a debugger with breakpoints, live code editing, network interception, and video recording. Works with any MCP client: Cursor, Claude, VS Code, and more. Open source, MIT licensed.

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