AI tool comparison
Figma AI Auto-Layout Suggestions & Content Fill vs Waypoint-1.5
Which one should you ship with? Here is the side-by-side panel verdict, pricing read, reviewer split, and community vote comparison.
Design & Creative
Figma AI Auto-Layout Suggestions & Content Fill
Figma's AI fills your designs with real content and fixes your layouts
100%
Panel ship
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Community
Free
Entry
Figma has moved its AI-powered auto-layout suggestions and content fill features to general availability for all paid plans. The tools analyze visual context to automatically populate designs with realistic placeholder content — names, avatars, product descriptions — and recommend responsive auto-layout configurations for existing frame structures. It's an incremental but meaningful upgrade baked directly into the design tool most teams already use.
Creative
Waypoint-1.5
Playable AI-generated worlds at 720p/60fps on your gaming GPU
75%
Panel ship
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Community
Free
Entry
Waypoint-1.5 is Overworld's second-generation real-time interactive world model, trained on roughly 100x more data than its predecessor. It generates explorable, playable environments at 720p and 60fps on consumer RTX 3090+ hardware, and a lighter 360p variant runs on gaming laptops and Apple Silicon. A browser-based streaming version requires no install at all. Unlike static video generators, Waypoint produces fully interactive environments — you move through them in real time. The model ships as a simple Windows EXE and runs entirely offline once downloaded. Overworld says the jump from Waypoint-1 to 1.5 wasn't just a quality bump — the new version handles dynamic objects, lighting transitions, and indoor/outdoor scene changes far more coherently. The team has been quiet about training data specifics, but gameplay footage and synthetic video datasets are implied. For game developers and creative technologists, this is the first world model that's genuinely usable outside a lab. It's already sparking experiments in procedural level design and AI-assisted world-building pipelines. Whether it evolves into a full game engine replacement remains to be seen, but the direction is unmistakable.
Reviewer scorecard
“Content Fill solves a genuinely tedious design problem — replacing 'Lorem ipsum' and grey boxes with contextually appropriate data so you can actually evaluate a layout instead of imagining it. The auto-layout suggestions are the more interesting feature: they surface the right constraint choices (fixed vs. hug vs. fill) in context, which is where most designers lose time. The specific decision that earns the ship here is that both features operate in-place without breaking the existing frame structure — Figma clearly thought about integration, not replacement.”
“Content Fill produces contextually aware placeholder data — realistic names, plausible product copy, appropriately sized images — which is meaningfully better than the lorem ipsum placeholder era. The taste layer is thin but present: the tool infers from component naming and visual structure what kind of content belongs where, so a card labeled 'user profile' gets a name and avatar, not a product description. The fingerprint problem is real though: all AI-filled content reads like the same anonymous stock internet, so the editing surface still matters, and right now iteration beyond 'regenerate' is limited.”
“As a game designer I've been waiting for something like this. The ability to rapidly sketch navigable spaces before committing to art direction is genuinely valuable. It's not replacing artists, it's giving us a new kind of whiteboard.”
“This is the rare case where an AI feature earns its place by being embedded at the exact point of friction — designers have been manually hunting for placeholder content and hand-tuning auto-layout constraints since both features shipped, so the job-to-be-done is real and the integration is correct. The scenario where it breaks is complex design systems with heavily customized component variants, where the AI suggestions either miss the constraint logic entirely or conflict with existing tokens. What kills it in 12 months isn't a competitor — it's Figma itself shipping this deeper into the Dev Mode and variables workflow, making the current GA feel like a stepping stone.”
“It's impressive as a demo but 'playable' is doing a lot of heavy lifting here. The generated worlds are still hallucinatory — geometry glitches, objects that morph, and no persistent state. For any real game or interactive experience you still need a traditional engine underneath it. This is a research preview dressed as a product.”
“The job-to-be-done is precise: get a design from empty skeleton to reviewable mock without manual data wrangling. Content Fill nails this in under two minutes for standard component structures — you select frames, invoke fill, and the design becomes legible to stakeholders immediately. The product is opinionated in the right direction: it doesn't ask you to configure a content schema, it infers from context. The gap that keeps this from a stronger score is that auto-layout suggestions still require the designer to accept or reject each recommendation individually, which adds friction in bulk-layout scenarios — a 'apply to all similar frames' affordance is conspicuously absent.”
“The fact that this runs offline on a 3090 is a bigger deal than any benchmark number. I can already see this slotting into prototype pipelines for indie game devs who want explorable placeholder worlds before artist assets are ready. The EXE install is a nice touch — zero friction.”
“We're watching the birth of a new kind of creative medium. In five years, 'procedurally generated' will mean a world model like this, not a Perlin noise heightmap. Waypoint-1.5 is the ImageNet moment for interactive environments — messy and incomplete, but the trajectory is undeniable.”
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