Here’s the side-by-side truth. I put Kimi K3 vs Fable 5 (and GPT 5.6 Soul) head-to-head across 50 different tasks — 3D games, simulations, video generation and more — to see which frontier model actually wins.
The short version: Kimi K3 stunned me, especially on 3D games and price, but there’s a clear case for keeping Claude. Here’s the full breakdown from my own testing.
Last updated: July 2026.
Key takeaways
- Across 50 tasks, Kimi K3 won most of the 3D game tests — smoother feel, better graphics and detail.
- Fable 5 often looked more basic and buggy in these builds; GPT 5.6 was strong on gameplay but had control issues.
- K3 is open source and far cheaper on tokens — it never ran out on the $39/month plan, while Claude and GPT did.
- My verdict: K3 for 3D games and value; Claude for high-stakes builds — and best of all, run them side by side in an Agent OS.
Kimi K3 vs Fable 5: The Quick Verdict
If you just want the answer: for 3D games and raw value, Kimi K3 came out on top in my tests. For big, high-stakes projects where I can’t afford mistakes, I’m still sticking with Claude Fable 5 because my systems and skills are built into it. GPT 5.6 sits in between — great gameplay, but rougher controls.
| Model | Best at | Watch out for |
|---|---|---|
| Kimi K3 | 3D games, visuals, price, open source | A few tests it failed and had to regenerate |
| Claude Fable 5 | High-stakes, reliable, trained-in skills | Looked more basic in game builds; token limits |
| GPT 5.6 Soul | Gameplay, adding enemies/interest | Broken controls in places; token limits |
Kimi K3 vs Fable 5 vs GPT 5.6: Full Comparison
| Kimi K3 | Fable 5 | GPT 5.6 | |
|---|---|---|---|
| 3D games | Best overall | More basic | Good gameplay |
| Graphics / detail | Strongest | Weakest | Nice, but flat |
| Gameplay feel | Very smooth | Buggy in parts | Often most interesting |
| Token limits | Never ran out ($39/mo) | Ran out on subscription | Ran out on subscription |
| Price | Much cheaper | Expensive | Expensive |
| Open source | Yes (Moonshot) | No | No |
| Plug into Hermes | Yes (coding plan) | Not without costly API | Yes |
The pattern was consistent: K3 for visuals and value, GPT 5.6 for gameplay, and Fable 5 as the reliable-but-plainer option in these particular creative builds.
The Game Tests: What Actually Happened
I ran the same prompts through all three. Here’s how each test landed:
| Test | Winner | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Skyrim-style open world | K3 & Fable 5 (tie) | GPT 5.6’s controls were backwards |
| Dragon Realm | K3 (detail), GPT 5.6 (gameplay) | Fable 5 struggled; K3’s dragon was a first |
| Racing game | K3 | GPT 5.6 beat Fable 5 but slowed down |
| Neon City drive | K3 | Fable 5 felt a generation behind |
| Crypt / maze | K3 (graphics), GPT 5.6 (gameplay) | Fable 5 buggy; K3 failed one variant |
| Black hole simulation | K3 | The others looked broken |
| Fluid-in-a-box | K3 | Fable 5 very basic; GPT 5.6 interesting |
It wasn’t a clean sweep — K3 failed a couple of tests and needed a regenerate, and GPT 5.6 genuinely made some games more fun to play. But on visuals, detail and that hard-to-describe ‘smooth’ feel, K3 kept winning.
Kimi K3: Strengths & Weaknesses
Where it wins
- Best 3D game visuals and detail in my tests — and a consistently smooth feel
- Open source (from Moonshot AI in China), so it’s at the frontier and improving fast
- Far cheaper on tokens — it never ran out on the $39/month plan, even with regenerations
- You can plug it into your Hermes agent on the coding plan
Where it slips
It failed a couple of the harder tests and needed regenerating, and self-hosting the open-source weights needs serious hardware. But for the price, the quality is genuinely frontier-grade — see my guide to using Kimi K3 for free.
Claude Fable 5: Strengths & Weaknesses
Where it wins
Reliability. For anything high-stakes — like building out my Agent OS, where mistakes are costly — I stick with Claude, because my systems and skills are already trained into it. It was my favourite model before K3 arrived.
Where it slips
In these creative game builds it often looked more basic and blocky than K3, and buggier in parts. You also have to watch tokens carefully — it ran out on the subscription during my Goldie Bench runs, forcing me onto the more expensive API. Compare it head-to-head in my GPT 5.6 vs Fable 5 breakdown.
GPT 5.6 Soul: Strengths & Weaknesses
Where it wins
Gameplay. GPT 5.6 often made the games more interesting to actually play — adding enemies, more engaging mechanics — and on one failure test its output looked ten times better than the others.
Where it slips
Controls. More than once the buttons were backwards or the movement was off. Like Claude, it’s not open source and you have to watch tokens.
Price & Tokens: The Big Difference
This is where it got interesting. During my Goldie Bench runs, both Claude and GPT 5.6 ran out of tokens on their subscriptions — I had to switch to the API for a lot of tests, which gets expensive fast. Kimi K3, on just the $39/month plan, kept steaming along even when I regenerated tests.
| Kimi K3 | Kimi K2.7 (previous gen) | |
|---|---|---|
| Input tokens | $3 / million | $0.72 / million |
| Quality | 2–3x better than K2.7 | Older, weaker |
| Latency | Slower than K2.7 | Faster |
So K3 costs more than the previous generation, but the jump in quality is huge — and it’s still dramatically cheaper than Claude or GPT on the token plan. Because it’s open source, you can also plug the coding plan straight into your Hermes agent, something you can’t do with Fable 5 unless you pay for the API.
Benchmarks (and Why I Don’t Fully Trust Them)
I don’t put much weight on public benchmarks — that’s exactly why I built Goldie Bench and test everything myself. The public numbers are all over the place:
- On DeepSWE, K3 was actually out-performed by both Fable 5 and GPT 5.6 Soul.
- On Terminal Bench 2.1 (unofficial numbers shared by Leo): Fable 5 scored 84.6, Kimi K3 88.3, and GPT 5.6 Soul 88.8.
- On OpenRouter they share the same context window and are all reasoning models with similar modalities.
The lesson: don’t take anyone’s word for it — including mine. Test the models on your own tasks and decide.
The Real Answer: Run Them Side by Side
Here’s what I actually do: instead of picking one winner, I run Claude, Codex and Kimi K3 together inside an Agent OS. They share a group chat, I can orchestrate all three as a team, and a shared memory system means that when K3 launched, it already knew everything about my projects — I wasn’t starting from scratch.
You can even fuse them as a mixture of experts — K3’s visuals plus GPT’s gameplay plus Claude’s reliability. The full Agent OS (updated the same day K3 dropped), the Kimi K3 masterclass, the zip installer and weekly coaching are all inside the AI Profit Boardroom. New here? Start free with my AI course and community (plus 1,000+ AI agents), or grab a free strategy session.
FAQ
Is Kimi K3 better than Fable 5?
In my 3D game and simulation tests, yes — K3 had better visuals, detail and a smoother feel, and it’s far cheaper. But for high-stakes, reliable builds I still prefer Claude Fable 5.
Which is cheaper, Kimi K3 or Fable 5?
Kimi K3, by a wide margin. It never ran out of tokens on the $39/month plan, while Claude and GPT 5.6 ran out on their subscriptions and forced me onto the pricier API.
Is Kimi K3 or GPT 5.6 better for games?
K3 won on graphics and detail; GPT 5.6 often won on gameplay and added more interesting mechanics. GPT 5.6 did, however, have backwards controls in several tests.
Is Kimi K3 open source?
Yes — it’s from Moonshot AI and is open source, unlike Fable 5 and GPT 5.6. That also lets you plug it into a Hermes agent on the coding plan.
Should I switch from Claude to Kimi K3?
Not entirely. Use K3 for 3D games and cost savings, keep Claude for high-stakes work — and ideally run both side by side in an Agent OS so you get the best of each.
The Bottom Line
Kimi K3 beat Fable 5 on 3D games and cost; Claude stays my pick for high-stakes builds. Get all the models running together with the Agent OS in the AI Profit Boardroom.