Score breakdown
Popularity is tracked separately. Support, ads, sponsorships, and tips never affect these signals.
Why it matters
Useful for creators, localization teams, course builders, and devrel operators who need reproducible subtitle workflows instead of reassembling the same transcription and translation stack for every project.
Who should use it
Who should skip it
Move on from deusjin/subforge if the licensing terms, language support, or platform requirements do not fit your project.
About this signal
deusjin/subforge is tracked by RepoRadar as a subtitle cli in the Creator Tools section. It was first seen on 2026-06-28 and last updated on 2026-06-28. The current verdict is 'try now' with a Silver tier and moderate setup difficulty. deusjin/subforge leads on workflow potential (8.9) and open-source/build quality (8.4); its lowest signal is maturity (5.7), so factor that in before investing setup time. This page summarizes the evidence RepoRadar has captured from captured source metadata. The score, tier, risk label, and verdict on this page are never influenced by sponsorship, ads, or tips — they reflect only the usefulness, popularity, novelty, momentum, maturity, and evidence signals described in the RepoRadar methodology.
How this item is evaluated
RepoRadar assigned deusjin/subforge a composite score of 7.8 out of 10, placing it in the Silver tier. This score combines weighted sub-signals: usefulness (35%), novelty (18%), momentum (14%), maturity (10%), open-source/build quality (7%), evidence quality (6%), workflow potential (6%), and setup ease (4%). Popularity is tracked separately at 1.0 and never affects the composite score or tier. The risk label of 'conditional' reflects inherent user-impacting hazards, not generic novelty. Items with no risk flag may still require normal code review before production use.
Putting this into practice? Read How to evaluate an AI tool before you adopt it for the checklist behind this score.
Risk explanation
Cloud translation backends can send transcript text off-box if enabled, so sensitive footage should stay on local or approved providers; The current release still builds from source and stitches together Rust, Python, and ffmpeg sidecars, so setup is heavier than a single-binary tool.
