Figma Make, the innovative prompt-to-app development platform unveiled earlier this year, has officially exited beta and rolled out to all users. This groundbreaking tool joins the ranks of AI-powered coding assistants like Google's Gemini Code Assist and Microsoft's GitHub Copilot, empowering creators to transform natural language descriptions into functional prototypes and applications without traditional programming expertise.
Originally accessible only to premium "Full Seat" subscribers during its beta phase, Figma Make now offers tiered access across all account types. While all users can experiment with the tool in personal drafts, publishing capabilities remain exclusive to Full Seat subscribers. View, Collab, Dev, and free Starter Seat users can explore the technology's potential, though commercial implementation requires upgrading to the complete feature set.
Figma Make distinguishes itself from competitive offerings through its unique design integration capabilities. Users can supplement their text descriptions with visual references - including uploaded images or existing Figma designs - to guide the AI's output. This hybrid approach allows for precise aesthetic control, enabling iterative refinements through additional AI prompts or manual adjustments to typography, formatting, and other design elements.
Simply describe your desired prototype or modification, and Figma Make's AI handles the complex implementation.Image: Figma
The general availability launch coincides with several other AI-enhanced Figma features graduating from beta, including:
The Make and Edit imaging tool leveraging generative AI for visual creation and manipulation
A resolution enhancement system for upgrading low-quality assets
Accompanying these releases is a new AI credit system allocating computational resources based on subscription tiers. View, Collab, and Dev Seat members receive limited credit pools (subject to adjustment), while Full Seat subscribers currently enjoy unrestricted access.
"Our credit system comfortably supports daily creative workflows for Full Seat users," Figma explained in their release notes. "We recognize some power users may require additional capacity, so we're developing credit expansion options for team administrators, launching later this year. Until then, Full Seat credit enforcement will remain lenient."
This phased rollout strategy allows Figma to balance broad accessibility with sustainable infrastructure demands while gathering valuable user feedback to refine their AI offerings.
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