Acquire X (Twitter) media and detailed tweet insights for content analysis and archiving.
Enter X/Twitter URLs or tweet IDs. Supports: or just the tweet ID.
Extract media from the main tweet (top post).
Extract media from reply tweets (comments).
Maximum number of replies to process for media extraction.
Enter Twitter usernames to scrape media from (without @). Required if 'Extract Profile Media' is enabled.
Extract media from the provided Twitter usernames' profiles.
Maximum number of media items to extract from each profile.
Filter media by type (Images, Videos, or GIFs).
Results to deliver
400 creditsThis agent actively searches live listings — results may vary. You are only charged for what is delivered, up to this number.
Lagic Proxy
Pricing
This tool extracts images, videos, and GIFs from X (Twitter) tweets and user profiles. Collect visual content, tweet text, engagement statistics, and author details to support content analysis, competitive research, or digital archiving.
This tool specializes in extracting media content from X (Twitter), formerly known as Twitter. It offers two primary modes of operation: extracting media from specific tweets or gathering media from entire user profiles. This makes it a versatile asset for anyone needing to collect visual data from the platform. ### What You Can Extract When you provide specific tweet URLs or IDs, the tool focuses on that individual post. You can also opt to include media from replies to the main tweet, allowing for a broader collection around a specific conversation. For deeper dives, you can input X (Twitter) usernames, and the tool will scrape media directly from their profiles. This is particularly useful for analyzing a user's content strategy or building a media archive for a brand or influencer. Beyond just the media files (images, videos, GIFs) themselves, the tool also collects rich metadata. This includes the full tweet text, the unique tweet identifier, a direct link back to the original tweet, the author's username and full name, the date the tweet was posted, and the date the data was collected. Crucially, you'll also get engagement statistics, such as the number of comments, likes, retweets, and views, as well as an indication if the author's account is verified. ### Tailor Your Data Collection The tool provides extensive filtering options to ensure you get exactly the data you need. You can specify the media types you want to include (all, images, videos, or GIFs). When scraping profiles, you can further refine your search by setting minimum thresholds for likes, retweets, and replies, allowing you to focus on high-engagement content. There's also an option to only include tweets from verified accounts and to filter tweets by specific language codes, making your data highly targeted. For users interested in the highest fidelity, the tool can include all available quality versions of media. This is especially valuable for graphic designers, researchers, or anyone requiring original resolution assets. By offering both broad and granular control over data extraction, this tool serves a wide range of content and data analysis needs.
Start by entering the X (Twitter) URLs or tweet IDs for specific posts you want to extract media from.
Alternatively, provide a list of X (Twitter) usernames if you want to scrape media directly from their profiles.
Specify your media preferences by selecting 'images', 'videos', 'gifs', or 'all', and set any minimum engagement filters for profile scrapes.
Decide whether to include media from replies to main tweets or to extract all available quality versions of the media.
Run the tool, and it will navigate to the specified tweets or profiles to collect the media and associated data.
Receive a structured JSON file containing direct media URLs, tweet text, author details, and engagement statistics.