Cluegent vs Final Round AI at a glance
What Final Round AI offers
Final Round AI's official site describes an Interview Copilot, AI mock interviews, resume tools, interview reports, and a native “Stealth” desktop app. Its FAQ lists Windows 10+ and Apple Silicon macOS support. The company currently advertises a free plan and paid subscriptions starting at $25 per month, although plan details and promotions can change.
Source checked July 5, 2026: Final Round AI official website and official FAQ.
Where Cluegent is different
Cluegent keeps the product surface narrower. It combines user-controlled listening, typed prompts, screenshot-aware questions, resume context, customizable quick actions, and local meeting history in one desktop overlay. That makes it useful beyond candidate preparation—for example, permitted technical discussions, customer calls, and working meetings.
Cluegent is the better fit when you already prepare elsewhere and mainly want a lightweight live desktop workflow. Final Round AI is the better fit when you want a larger preparation ecosystem with mock interviews and career tools around the live copilot.
How to test both products fairly
- Use the same resume, job description, and five practice questions.
- Measure time to the first useful text—not only the completed answer.
- Compare a behavioral question, a technical explanation, and one screenshot-based task.
- Test the exact Zoom, Google Meet, or Teams sharing mode you expect to use.
- Review plan limits, operating-system support, cancellation terms, and support response before paying.
Privacy and responsible use
Both products use privacy or stealth language. No overlay should be treated as a universal guarantee against every monitoring, recording, security, or proctoring method. Use AI assistance, audio capture, and screenshots only when the interviewer, organization, platform, and applicable law allow them.
Where Cluegent helps
Cluegent supports permitted live workflows with transcript context, typed prompts, screenshot-aware answers, resume context, custom response behavior, quick action buttons, and a private desktop overlay. It is most useful when you already understand the subject and need help staying structured under pressure.