Tiberium

Notion vs OneNote — and why a third option keeps winning

Notion vs OneNote comparisons usually pretend the answer is binary. It is not. Each app fits a different shape of work — and Tiberium often slots in as the calmer middle option.

Where Notion wins, where OneNote wins

Notion is unmatched if you want a single workspace that holds databases, wikis, project trackers, and notes in one place. OneNote wins when the work is closer to its native shape — a notebook, a quick capture grid, a markdown editor, a sync engine.

The honest answer most Notion vs OneNote threads avoid: most people only need a small slice of either app. If you find yourself fighting both, the right tool is probably simpler than either.

Where Tiberium fits in the middle

Tiberium is the calm middle option for people who looked at Notion vs OneNote and realized neither side fits. It opens straight into your last note, sync is instant, search is live, and any note can become a public page with one click.

  • Instant open — no splash screen, no plugin warmup
  • Folders, tags, and search you can actually live in
  • Publish any note as a clean shareable page
  • Free to start, one simple paid tier

Tiberium vs OneNote

FeatureTiberiumOneNote
Time to first noteInstant — opens on your last noteWorkspace loads, sidebar warms up, then the page
Editor weightCalm canvas, minimal chromeBlocks, slash menus, side panels
OrganizationFolders + tags + templatesPages, subpages, databases, views
SearchLive, ranked, as you typeSubmit, wait, then click through
Public sharingOne-click clean public pageShared link wrapped in app chrome
PricingFree to start, one simple paid tierMultiple tiers with feature gating

How to decide between the three

Pick Notion if you genuinely want a workspace OS. Pick OneNote if it already matches the shape of your work. Pick Tiberium if you mostly want to write things down, find them later, and occasionally share one publicly.

Try a Notion vs OneNote that respects your time

Tiberium is free to start. Capture ideas, organize notes, and publish in seconds — the Notion vs OneNote most people actually stick with.

Sign up for Tiberium

Frequently asked questions

Is this really a fair Notion vs OneNote comparison?

It is honest about the trade-offs. Notion is a workspace OS; OneNote fits a different shape; Tiberium is the calm middle option for note-taking specifically. Pick whichever matches the work you actually do most often.

Is Tiberium free?

Yes. There is a free tier with the whole notes app, and a simple paid tier for extras like monetization on published pages.

Can I import my Notion content?

Tiberium accepts pasted text and Markdown. Most people copy across the pages they still reread and leave the rest archived in Notion.

Does Tiberium work offline?

Tiberium runs in the browser and saves to the cloud as you type. Short connection blips are fine; long offline sessions are not the primary target yet.

Where are my notes stored?

Your notes live in our managed cloud database, scoped to your account. Only you can see them unless you publish a note as a public page.