Hypefury dropped X — an alternative for people still on it
Hypefury no longer supports 𝕏/Twitter; its channels are Bluesky, Threads, LinkedIn and Instagram. An honest comparison with tweetloom for anyone staying on X: what you gain, what you give up.
alternative · July 9, 2026
Hypefury isn't a bad tool — it just isn't an X tool anymore. They appear to have moved the X side to a separate product; if your account still posts to X, you're probably on that. If you're arriving today, hypefury.com doesn't offer X at all — so this is a list of alternatives, not a head-to-head.
| feature | Hypefury | tweetloom |
|---|---|---|
| 𝕏 (Twitter) support | Gone from hypefury.com; existing users moved to a separate product | X only, by design |
| Other platforms | Bluesky, Threads, LinkedIn, Instagrambetter there | None — X only |
| Price | $6/mo single plan (1 channel), 7-day free trialbetter there | Free plan + $15 / $35 / $59 per month |
| Reply drafting | None | Drafts replies to the accounts you watch, in your voice, for your approval |
| Auto first comment (auto-plug) | Yes | Yes — fires once your own tweet crosses a like threshold |
| Voice training | AI trained on your own posts | Voice profile from your own tweets, plus style samples |
| Interface languages | English, French, Spanish, Portuguese | Turkish and English |
| Import | —better there | No Hypefury importer (manual setup) |
on marked rows, the competitor is ahead
What happened
In the FAQ on Hypefury's own pricing page, the answer to "Does Hypefury still support 𝕏/Twitter?" is a single line: no, not anymore. X is absent from the list of channels you can connect — in its place are Bluesky, Threads, LinkedIn and Instagram.
This is a recent decision. In the 8 May 2026 archive of that same page, the answer to the same question was still "yes"; within two months it became "no". If you're still on Hypefury, you may have only just noticed.
But my account still works?
It might. A long-time Hypefury user told us he hit a "X no longer supported" message at sign-in, was pointed to a separate address that does support X, and found all of his scheduled posts intact there. So the X side didn't die; it left Hypefury. We can't independently verify the name of that product, so we won't name it here.
The practical upshot: if your account works, you have no emergency. But for anyone arriving at hypefury.com today, X isn't on the menu — it's absent from the channel list and the FAQ says no. This page is written for that person.
They didn't say why, and we won't speculate.
What you give up leaving Hypefury
Let's be straight: moving to tweetloom costs you some things. Better to know now than to switch tools twice.
- +Multi-platform publishing. Hypefury posts to Bluesky, Threads, LinkedIn and Instagram from one place. tweetloom publishes to X and nowhere else.
- +Price. Hypefury is $6/month for one channel. tweetloom has a free plan, but the autonomous reply engine sits on the top tier ($59).
- +A ready migration path. There's no Hypefury importer here; you set up your sources and settings by hand.
If LinkedIn or Instagram is the center of your work and X is a side channel, staying on Hypefury and handling X manually is a reasonable call. This page exists to help you decide, not to convince you.
What you gain with tweetloom
A coworker that writes replies, not a scheduler
Even when Hypefury worked on X, it was a scheduler: you wrote, it published. Replies sit at the center of tweetloom. When an account you watch posts, loom drafts a reply in your trained voice and puts it in an approval queue. You look, and if you like it, you send it.
It doesn't fire automatically — you approve
Reply drafts never leave your account on their own. They wait in the queue; when you hit "reply on 𝕏", X's own reply screen opens in your browser. That's a deliberate distance from the account risk created by tools that fire replies automatically.
Turkish, not a translation
tweetloom was built to write Turkish — both the interface and the output. Reading an English source and commenting on it in Turkish is the product's core use case, not a language option bolted on later. It writes English too.
Credits are one-to-one
One credit is one tweet. Most tools charge 5-10 credits for a single tweet; we don't inflate the number. Every credit you spend is itemized in your ledger.
How the move works
The setup wizard is four steps: connect your X account, let it learn your voice from your recent tweets, pick the accounts and sources to watch, and collect your first drafts. Those first drafts land in the approval queue within a few minutes — you don't have to wait for one of your sources to post something new.
We don't ask for a card. You try the top plan for seven days; when it ends your account doesn't lock, it drops to the permanent free plan.
frequently asked
Why did Hypefury drop X?
They didn't say. Their FAQ only states that they no longer support it. We won't guess at the reason.
My Hypefury account still posts to X. Is this page wrong?
No, but it would have been incomplete, so we added this: the X side appears to have moved to a separate address, and existing users' data went with it. On hypefury.com itself X is gone — from the channel list and from the FAQ. If your account works, you're on the version that moved.
Can I import my Hypefury content into tweetloom?
There's no importer. You'll need to recreate your scheduled posts and sources by hand. The setup wizard makes that a few minutes of work, but it isn't an automatic migration.
Does tweetloom comply with X's rules?
The connection uses X's official OAuth flow; we never see your password. Replies aren't posted automatically — they go to an approval queue and are sent from X's own reply screen. Details are on our security page.
Can I try it for free?
Yes, seven days with no card. When the trial ends you drop to the permanent free plan; there's no surprise charge.
Does it post to Bluesky or LinkedIn?
No. tweetloom is built for X only. If you need multi-platform publishing, this product won't cover it.
Competitor data verified from their own page on July 9, 2026