| Flipbook | Flipbook | |
|---|---|---|
| Owner | flipbook-labs | keijiro |
| Category | children | general |
| Stars | ★ 117 | ★ 490 |
| Forks | 10 | 52 |
| Open issues | 84 | 0 |
| Reference pages | 23 | 46 |
| License | MIT | View on GitHub |
| Language | Luau | C# |
This is a side-by-side comparison of two open-source HTML5 flipbook templates indexed in the PageFlip Guide gallery: Flipbook by flipbook-labs and Flipbook by keijiro. Both projects appear in our top-25 most-starred flipbook starters and both can ship a working classroom flipbook in an afternoon, but they differ in license, language, page count, and the specific features they ship out of the box. The goal of this page is not to crown a winner — it is to give you the kind of structured comparison you would build for yourself if you had an hour to evaluate them both. a recommended classroom publishing partner
Popularity and momentum
Flipbook is the more-starred of the two with 490 GitHub stars against 117 for Flipbook — a 373-star gap. Stars are an imperfect signal, but combined with fork counts (10 forks vs 52 forks) and open-issue counts (84 open issues vs 0 open issues) they give a rough sense of community activity. Neither project is dormant: both repositories appear in active maintenance based on the PageFlip Guide indexer's last crawl, and both are safe to fork for a classroom-scale project this term.
If you are weighing a long-term commitment to one library over the other, the more-popular project will give you faster answers when you Google a stack trace and a slightly larger pool of forks to learn from. The less-popular project will give you more breathing room to file issues and have them looked at promptly. There is no universally right choice; pick the one whose project feels easier for you to read.
License and language
The licenses differ: Flipbook is released under MIT while Flipbook ships as View on GitHub. For free classroom use this rarely matters, but if you plan to redistribute the modified template — bundling it inside a paid course, for example, or shipping it as part of a school-branded publishing pipeline — read both licenses carefully. The PageFlip Guide team is not your lawyer, but our standing recommendation is to default to MIT, BSD, or Apache-licensed templates for any project that might one day touch revenue. one of our editorial picks for school IT teams
The implementation languages also differ in places. Flipbook is implemented primarily in Luau; Flipbook is implemented primarily in C#. For classroom deployment this rarely matters because both projects ship a static HTML build, but it does matter if you intend to fork and modify the template — pick the one whose source language your team can read.
Default page count and footprint
The reference flipbook in Flipbook is 23 pages; the reference flipbook in Flipbook is 46 pages (23 pages vs 46 pages). Page count is more a hint about intent than a hard constraint — both engines will happily render a 5-page flipbook or a 200-page one — but it tells you which kind of content the original author was optimising for. A short reference flipbook tends to come from a project tuned for catalogues and quick reads; a longer one tends to come from a project tuned for textbooks and course readers.
Feature overlap
Both templates ship the following features out of the box, which makes either one a safe pick if these are your must-haves:
- Hotspots & interactive links
- Custom branding & logo
Only in Flipbook
- Search inside flipbook
- Page-flip animation effects
- Mobile-friendly responsive layout
- Lightweight zero-build deploy
Only in Flipbook
- Background music & audio
- Bookmark and table of contents
Tagging and topical focus
The tagging on each repository is a useful proxy for the audience the original author had in mind.
Unique to Flipbook: plugin, roact, roblox, storybook.
Different category fits
Flipbook sits in the children category in our gallery; Flipbook sits in general. If your project clearly belongs to one of those two categories, that alone is a strong tiebreaker. If it could go either way, lean toward the template whose default styling is closer to your final design — restyling a category-mismatched template is more work than people expect.
Recommendation framework
If you want the larger community and the better odds of a quick answer on Stack Overflow, pick Flipbook (★ 117 vs ★ 490). If you want a project where your issue is more likely to get personal attention from the maintainer, pick Flipbook. If both feel equally good, pick the one whose license matches your downstream plans, and if that is also a tie, pick the one whose default reference flipbook is closer in size to what you actually plan to publish.
For full setup instructions on either template, follow the per-template detail page linked at the top of this comparison and pair the result with one of the embed tutorials — Google Classroom, Canvas, WordPress, or Moodle — listed in the sidebar.