
xAI has launched a new version of its proprietary large language model, Grok 4.3, alongside a web-based voice cloning suite, as the Elon Musk–founded AI company continues to position itself as a direct challenger to OpenAI.
The release lands while Musk is locked in a legal fight with OpenAI co-founder Sam Altman, but xAI’s product roadmap appears unchanged: keep shipping competitive models and tools, and keep them aggressively priced for developers.
Grok 4.3 is described as a new base large language model and a successor to Grok 4.2. According to independent AI model evaluation firm Artificial Analysis, Grok 4.3 shows a significant performance jump over Grok 4.2 on third-party benchmarks.
Even with those gains, Grok 4.3 is still assessed as performing below the current state-of-the-art large language models from OpenAI and Anthropic. Recent systems from Google and several Chinese players including DeepSeek, Moonshot (Kimi), Alibaba’s Qwen, and z.ai have also surpassed earlier Grok releases, intensifying the competitive pressure on xAI.
The new model arrives after a turbulent period for the company. Reporting has highlighted that all ten of Musk’s original xAI co-founders, along with dozens of researchers, have left the firm. Over the same period, rival models have moved ahead on benchmark performance, forcing xAI to lean more heavily on differentiation beyond pure capability scores.
Pricing has become one of Grok’s defining features. xAI has increasingly focused on keeping its models inexpensive to access via the xAI API, pitching cost as a core advantage for developers and businesses that need to run large workloads.
With Grok 4.3, that strategy continues: access is priced at $1.25 per million input tokens via the API. In an ecosystem where model access costs can quickly add up at scale, that figure underscores xAI’s attempt to compete on affordability even if it is not leading on benchmark performance.
Beyond text, xAI has also introduced a new voice cloning suite available on the web through its console. The suite is positioned as fast and powerful, and sits alongside Grok 4.3 as part of a growing set of tools aimed at developers building AI-powered applications. The voice cloning feature extends the Grok brand beyond chat-style language interaction into multimodal and media-focused use cases.
Grok itself has been marketed not only on price but also on personality and policy choices. Musk has publicly framed the assistant as an alternative to what he calls “wokeness,” and Grok has been associated with a more freewheeling style and a comparatively permissive image generation policy. Those stances, combined with lower access costs, form the core of xAI’s attempt to carve out a distinctive space in a crowded AI market.
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