AI tool comparison
ChatGPT Images 2.0 vs Figma AI Make Prototype
Which one should you ship with? Here is the side-by-side panel verdict, pricing read, reviewer split, and community vote comparison.
Image Generation
ChatGPT Images 2.0
OpenAI's gpt-image-2 replaces DALL-E with 4096px output and near-perfect text
75%
Panel ship
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Community
Free
Entry
OpenAI launched ChatGPT Images 2.0 today via a noon PT livestream, powered by gpt-image-2 — a full replacement for DALL-E. The headline capabilities: 4096×4096 pixel output, claimed 99% text rendering accuracy including multilingual typography (Japanese, Korean, Chinese, Hindi, Bengali), up to 8 images per prompt, and 2x faster generation than the model it replaces. Unlike DALL-E, gpt-image-2 integrates O-series reasoning — the model researches and plans the structure of an image before rendering begins, similar to how o3 reasons through a math problem before outputting an answer. The practical applications being demoed extend well beyond standard image generation: infographics with accurate data labels, presentation slides, geographic maps, manga-style sequential panels, and UI mockup wireframes. The text rendering accuracy in particular is being highlighted as a step-change — previous generative image models consistently mangled multilingual text, which made them largely unusable for international design and publishing workflows. Available to all ChatGPT users starting today. Paid tiers get higher resolution and output volume limits. API access opens in early May. The launch is drawing comparison to DALL-E 3's moment in 2023, though the technical bar has moved significantly — TechCrunch called the text accuracy "surprisingly good" and VentureBeat noted multilingual handling was "seemingly flawless" in demo conditions.
Design & Creative
Figma AI Make Prototype
Turn static Figma frames into deployable web apps with one click
75%
Panel ship
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Community
Free
Entry
Figma's Make Prototype feature uses AI to convert static design frames into interactive, deployable web apps with real data bindings. It bridges the handoff gap between design and engineering by generating functional frontend code directly from Figma designs. The feature lives inside the existing Figma workflow, requiring no context switching to go from mockup to working prototype.
Reviewer scorecard
“API access in May is the real play here. Accurate multilingual text in generated images unlocks localization workflows that were previously impossible to automate — generating region-specific marketing assets at scale without a designer touching every language variant. The O-series planning integration is a genuine architecture upgrade.”
“The primitive here is code generation from a design IR — Figma's internal node tree is surprisingly information-dense, and using it as the source of truth for code gen is a smarter bet than screenshot-to-code approaches. The DX bet is 'zero config by default, escape hatch for the real engineer' — which is the right call. My concern is the 'real data bindings' claim: if that means hardcoded JSON stubs dressed up as dynamic bindings, the moment a developer inherits this output and tries to wire a real API, the abstraction collapses. The weekend alternative here is v0 or Lovable fed a screenshot — Make Prototype earns its keep only if the generated code doesn't require a full rewrite, and that depends entirely on what the output actually looks like under the hood.”
“The '99% text accuracy' claim needs independent reproduction before it's credible — OpenAI's live demos have a history of cherry-picking favorable conditions. And 4096px at 8 images per prompt is meaningless if rate limits are aggressive. Wait to see the actual API pricing and limits before integrating this into any pipeline.”
“The category here is design-to-code, and the direct competitors are Anima, Locofy, and Builder.io — all of which have been promising 'pixel-perfect production code' for three years and consistently delivering 'good enough for a demo.' Figma's distribution advantage is real, but distribution doesn't fix the core problem: design files are rarely production-ready, and the gap between what a designer draws and what an engineer needs to ship is 80% business logic, not layout. This breaks the moment a design has conditional states, authenticated routes, or anything beyond a marketing page. What kills this in 12 months: GitHub Copilot and Cursor already accept screenshots and design tokens; Figma's moat is the file format, not the AI, and that's a thin moat once export formats standardize.”
“Accurate text rendering in generated images is the unlock that turns generative image tools from 'creative exploration' into 'production asset pipeline.' Combined with O-series reasoning, this moves image generation from stochastic to structured. The creative tools landscape just shifted again.”
“Accurate multilingual typography in generated imagery is something the design community has been waiting years for. If the text quality holds at production scale, this replaces a painful manual step for anyone doing international content. The infographic and slide generation demos alone would justify the upgrade.”
“This is the first AI feature Figma has shipped that doesn't feel bolted on — it lives at the natural end of the design workflow rather than interrupting it, which suggests the team actually mapped the job before building the feature. The interaction model is sound: designers already think in frames, and treating a frame as a deployable unit respects that mental model instead of asking them to learn a new one. My only structural concern is error states — when the AI misinterprets a component's intent, does the designer get a diff they can understand, or a black-box regeneration? That editing surface will determine whether this is a workflow tool or a demo.”
“The job-to-be-done is precise: 'I want stakeholders to experience the design as a working thing, not a click-through prototype' — and Make Prototype nails that job without asking the user to learn a new tool. Onboarding is zero-friction by design since it's a feature inside a product people already have open. The completeness question is where it gets interesting: if this produces a shareable URL with real interactions and data, it replaces InVision, Framer, and ProtoPie for most use cases in one move — but if the output is a Figma mirror that can't be exported or hosted independently, it's a better demo tool, not a workflow replacement. The specific product decision that earns the ship is the same one that made Figma win the first time: making the collaboration artifact and the working artifact the same file.”
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