Check that the link is public
If lookup fails, confirm the URL is from twitter.com or x.com, includes /status/, is publicly accessible, and still has media attached.

Tool task
Save GIFs from public X/Twitter posts as reusable files. Paste a post link, let Tomako find the downloadable media, preview the motion, then download the GIF or keep the smaller MP4 source.
Enter inputs, review the output, then use the page guidance for the next step.
Paste a public Tweet or X post URL to see lookup progress, a GIF preview, and GIF or MP4 download actions here.
Paste a public X/Twitter post link and the page looks for animated media in the post, shows processing status, then returns a GIF preview, a .gif download, and the original MP4 source download when available.
Most people searching for a Twitter GIF downloader or how to download a Twitter GIF just want a reusable file from an embedded animation. Tomako keeps link recognition, media preview, format choice, and download actions in one workbench, so you can verify the motion first, then save the GIF or keep the smaller MP4.

When choosing a downloader, look for support for both twitter.com and x.com public post links, preview-before-download behavior, GIF and MP4 save options, clear failure messages, and plain rights, privacy, and platform boundaries.
Tomako is better suited to organizing animated media from public posts: it does not ask you to sign in to X/Twitter, it does not require manual media URL hunting, and it does not turn browser extensions, scripts, or conversion settings into user-facing work.
Use only public post links that you have permission to access and save. Whether you can reuse the downloaded GIF or MP4 depends on the original content rights, platform rules, and your use case.

If lookup fails, confirm the URL is from twitter.com or x.com, includes /status/, is publicly accessible, and still has media attached.
Save the GIF for quick reuse, presentations, and lightweight sharing; keep the MP4 when you need smaller files, steadier quality, or later editing.
Downloading a file does not grant content rights. For ads, commercial publishing, or public libraries, check creator permission and destination-platform rules.

Save animated media from public Tweets or X posts for swipe files, decks, or social media review.
Convert Twitter/X embedded GIF animations into portable GIF files for other tools.
Keep the MP4 source when you need a smaller and sharper video asset.
Archive public user feedback, competitor launches, or marketing examples in a local research library.
Twitter/X usually serves GIFs as MP4 animation files. A downloader needs to fetch the video source first, then convert it into a real .gif file.
Yes, for public x.com and twitter.com post links. The URL needs to include /status/ and a post ID, and the attached media must be publicly accessible.
Yes. When lookup succeeds, the page offers both a GIF download and the MP4 source download. MP4 is usually smaller and better for editing or long-term archiving.
No. Use publicly accessible X/Twitter post links only. Private, deleted, restricted, or login-only content usually cannot be resolved and should not be bypassed.
Private, deleted, restricted, media-free, rate-limited, or structurally changed X posts can fail. Confirm the post is a public animated media post, then try a different link.
The tool only converts public media you provide; it does not grant content rights. Before publishing, advertising, or commercial reuse, confirm that you have permission and follow X/Twitter and destination-platform rules.
After saving social media assets, turn product screenshots, motion, and value props into launch-ready creatives.