| ▲ | fastThinking an hour ago | |
I think you’re missing the point a bit. Not every tool needs to be Figma, and honestly, that’s a good thing. I’ve been using Figma for a while, and true, it’s powerful. At the same time it becomes increasingly complex, difficult, bloated overall. Simple tasks now require navigating through multiple menus, and the learning curve for new users is steep (took me a while to understand it, and the same experience had it acquaintances of mine). Sometimes I just want to sketch out an idea or make a task without dealing with all that overhead. The no plugin support thing actually makes sense to me. I’ve had Figma slow down or crash because of poorly maintained plugins. Having a tool that just works, consistently, without worrying about plugin compatibility or security issues? That’s valuable. And yeah, it’s a solo developer versus a massive company (that’s my understanding) but that is why it’s beautiful. Also it’s an uneven comparison if you ask me (but didn’t :)) ). However, the fact that this is even being compared to Figma shows the quality of what’s been built. Not everyone needs enterprise features. Some of us just want a clean, fast canvas without the friction. Every new feature of Figma feels like an attempt to monopolize the entire market. I think he did an incredible job. Good work. This has value. | ||
| ▲ | TonyStr 12 minutes ago | parent [-] | |
> Simple tasks now require navigating through multiple menus I'm curious which simple tasks you're referring to? > I’ve had Figma slow down or crash because of poorly maintained plugins Why not uninstall those plugins? Is no plugin support really the best solution to this problem? Was there not a reason that you originally installed those plugins? | ||