Evaluation · Nº 02

Open Design vs everything else.

Short, honest summaries of how Open Design relates to the other AI design and app-building tools you might be evaluating. Each links to a full, candid comparison.

  • Open Design vs Claude Design

    Same job, different posture: local-first, BYOK, open source (Apache-2.0), with portable DESIGN.md systems and composable SKILL.md skills. Honest about where a hosted product is more convenient.

    Read the full comparison ->
  • Open Design vs Figma

    Figma is a manual cloud design tool; Open Design is an agent-driven, local-first, open-source design layer. If you want files in your repo and BYOK over a hosted canvas, Open Design is the alternative — and it is honest about where Figma wins.

    Read the full comparison ->
  • Open Design vs Lovable

    Lovable ships hosted apps; Open Design ships design artifacts as files you own. If you want a design-first, BYOK, open-source workflow with your own agent, Open Design is the alternative — and it is honest about where Lovable wins.

    Read the full comparison ->
  • Open Design vs Bolt

    Bolt ships hosted apps; Open Design ships design artifacts as files you own. If you want a design-first, BYOK, open-source workflow with your own agent, Open Design is the alternative — and it is honest about where Bolt wins.

    Read the full comparison ->
  • Open Design vs v0

    v0 generates UI in Vercel’s hosted flow; Open Design generates design with your own agent, locally, as files you own. If you want BYOK, any agent, and open source over a hosted generator, Open Design is the alternative — and it is honest about where v0 wins.

    Read the full comparison ->
  • Open Design vs Framer

    Framer is a hosted no-code site builder; Open Design is an agent-driven, local-first, open-source design layer. If you want files in your repo and BYOK over a hosted canvas, Open Design is the alternative — and it is honest about where Framer wins.

    Read the full comparison ->
  • Open Design vs Google Stitch

    Google Stitch is a free, Gemini 3-powered UI generator from Google Labs — fast first drafts, Figma paste, HTML/CSS and React export, but cloud-only, closed-source, monthly generation caps, and no enforceable design system. Open Design is the open-source, local-first alternative: BYOK with your own coding agent, a portable DESIGN.md brand in your repo, and no account gating. This page is honest about where Stitch genuinely wins.

    Read the full comparison ->
  • Open Design vs Genspark

    Genspark AI Designer is a closed, credit-metered SaaS that excels at marketing graphics in one shot. Open Design is the open-source (Apache-2.0), local-first alternative for product UI: BYOK with your own agent, a portable DESIGN.md in your repo, and output you keep as files. They do different jobs — this page is honest about where Genspark wins.

    Read the full comparison ->
  • Open Design vs Figma Make

    Figma Make ships React apps inside Figma's cloud, behind a paid Full seat and AI credits that reset monthly. Open Design ships product UI as files you own — open source, local-first, driven by your own agent (BYOK). For a full move off Figma the design tool, see the Figma comparison; this page is about Figma Make.

    Read the full comparison ->
  • Open Design vs Qoder

    Qoder is one of the closest products in spirit to Open Design — both do design-as-code. The difference is openness: Open Design is Apache-2.0, local-first, and BYOK with your own coding agent; Qoder is closed-source and built around Qoder IDE. It is honest about where Qoder wins.

    Read the full comparison ->
  • Open Design vs Trae

    Trae is ByteDance's free, VS Code–based AI IDE; design-to-code (screenshot/Figma → React/Tailwind) and SOLO full-stack generation are features inside it. Open Design is design-first: it owns your design system (DESIGN.md) as files, is open source (Apache-2.0) and local-first, and runs on the coding agent you already use. They are complementary — Trae writes code, Open Design governs the design system.

    Read the full comparison ->

Honest limits — what Open Design isn't

Open Design is not trying to be every hosted AI design tool. These questions describe the trade-offs instead of glossing them.

  1. 01 Does Open Design offer a hosted web sandbox?

    No. Open Design is local-first by design.

  2. 02 Can I use Open Design without installing anything?

    Not today. The minimum is a local daemon plus a coding agent.

  3. 03 Is Open Design a v0 / Lovable / Bolt replacement?

    It depends. Open Design focuses on prompt-to-design-artifact via a skill protocol you can fork.

  4. 04 Does Open Design send my data to Anthropic, OpenAI, or Google?

    Only your prompt and skill context goes to the provider whose key you brought.

  5. 05 Can I self-host Open Design on my own infrastructure?

    Yes. Apache-2.0 license, Node 24 daemon, no required SaaS.