AI tool comparison
Figma AI Site Builder vs Pika 2.5
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 Site Builder
Generate responsive layouts from prompts using your own design system
100%
Panel ship
—
Community
Free
Entry
Figma AI's Site Builder generates responsive web layouts from natural language prompts while respecting existing design system components and brand tokens. It lives natively inside Figma, so generated layouts use your actual component library rather than generic placeholder elements. The feature targets designers who want to move from brief to wireframe faster without abandoning their established design systems.
Design & Creative
Pika 2.5
AI video generation with character consistency across scenes
75%
Panel ship
—
Community
Free
Entry
Pika 2.5 is an AI-native video generation tool that introduces a character consistency engine, allowing users to maintain visual identity for characters across multiple generated scenes. The update targets filmmakers and marketers building short-form narrative content with coherent visual storytelling. Users can generate multi-scene sequences where characters retain their appearance without manual re-prompting or reference image injection every clip.
Reviewer scorecard
“The component-aware generation is the actual design decision that earns this a ship — it means generated layouts use your real spacing tokens, your actual button variants, your defined type scale, not a hallucinated approximation of them. That's the difference between a tool that creates cleanup work and one that creates a starting point. The caveat: it still leans heavily on auto-layout defaults that produce structurally correct but visually predictable grids, so if your design system is expressive rather than utilitarian, the outputs will flatten it. But compared to every other AI layout tool that ignores your existing system entirely and forces a manual remap, this is a meaningful step toward AI that respects craft.”
“What this actually produces is a responsive grid that slots your real components into sensible hierarchy — hero, nav, content sections — which sounds modest until you remember every other AI design tool hands you a Figma file full of ungrouped rectangles pretending to be a design system. The taste layer here is partially baked-in and partially delegated: Figma's model has learned layout conventions, but the tokens and components you've defined do the aesthetic heavy lifting, which means the output quality ceiling is directly tied to how mature your design system is. The editing surface is native Figma, which is genuinely good news — you're not trapped in a generation-only interface — but the AI doesn't yet understand iterative prompts like 'make this section feel less corporate,' so the refinement loop still drops back to manual.”
“Character consistency is the single hardest unsolved problem in AI video — every other tool produces a protagonist who ages five years between cuts — and Pika 2.5 actually addresses it at the generation level rather than bolting on a ControlNet hack. The output I've seen from demos retains costume color, face structure, and hair across scene transitions in a way that doesn't require me to rebuild the character from scratch each time. The editing surface is still limited — you get scene-level regeneration but not fine-grained keyframe control — but for short-form narrative ads and social content, this is the first AI video tool where I could plausibly build a three-act story without the character looking like a different person in act two.”
“The component-aware angle is the only thing that distinguishes this from the dozen AI layout generators that already exist, and it's a real differentiator — when it works. The scenario where it breaks is the one most teams actually face: design systems that aren't perfectly structured, with inconsistent naming conventions, missing variants, or components that predate auto-layout. Feed it a messy real-world library and the generation quality degrades to the same generic output you'd get from any competitor. What kills this in 12 months isn't a competitor — it's Figma itself shipping a more capable version bundled deeper into the product, making the current feature feel like a preview rather than a destination. Ships because it solves a real problem for teams with mature design systems, but that's a narrower user base than Figma's marketing implies.”
“Character consistency in multi-shot AI video is a real, painful problem, so credit where it's due — Pika isn't solving a fake problem here. The category is crowded with Kling, Runway Gen-4, and Sora all making similar consistency claims, and the actual differentiator between them lives entirely in how the engine holds up on edge cases: hats, glasses, non-standard skin tones, motion blur, occlusion recovery. Pika hasn't published any methodology or benchmark for consistency accuracy, which means this ships on vibes until someone does systematic comparisons. What kills this in 12 months isn't a competitor — it's that Sora and Gemini video ship native character memory and the whole feature becomes table stakes overnight.”
“The buyer is already a Figma Professional subscriber, which means this feature has zero new sales motion — it's pure retention and upsell insurance against competitors like Framer AI and the growing list of design-to-code tools threatening Figma's seat count. The moat here isn't the AI generation itself, it's the component graph: Figma already owns the design system artifact for most mid-size product teams, so a generation feature that reads that artifact is structurally harder to replicate than a standalone AI layout tool. The business risk is that this accelerates the timeline to 'one designer instead of three,' which is good for Figma's enterprise retention story but creates real pricing pressure as the per-seat model gets harder to justify. Ships because it strengthens Figma's platform lock-in at exactly the moment competitors were starting to find footholds.”
“The buyer here is a digital marketer or indie filmmaker, and that's a notoriously price-sensitive cohort with zero switching costs and a habit of chasing whatever tool demoed best on Twitter last week. Pika's pricing tops out at $55/mo Pro, which is reasonable but means they're capturing a fraction of what an agency would pay for genuine character-locked video production — there's no enterprise tier with seat licensing, brand kit management, or SLA, so the expansion revenue story is missing. The moat problem is severe: character consistency is a model capability, not a workflow lock-in, which means every model lab ships this and Pika's edge evaporates. For this to work as a business, they need to move upstream into the brand workflow — persistent character libraries, brand approval flows, campaign asset management — before Runway or Adobe does. Right now it's a feature, not a defensible product layer.”
“The thesis here is specific and falsifiable: in 2-3 years, narrative video production will shift from assembling human-acted footage to assembling AI-generated scene primitives, and character consistency is the load-bearing constraint that has to be solved before that shift can happen at scale. Pika is betting on that transition early and building the right primitive — persistent character identity as a first-class object rather than a prompt artifact. The second-order effect worth watching is that this potentially decouples character IP from human actors: brands and indie creators could own persistent synthetic characters with the same continuity guarantees as a real cast member. The dependency that has to hold is that consistency quality crosses the uncanny valley threshold fast enough to outpace audience skepticism, and we're not there yet — but the trend line from 2024 to now suggests 18 months is plausible.”
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