AI tool comparison
Figma for Agents vs Open Generative AI
Which one should you ship with? Here is the side-by-side panel verdict, pricing read, reviewer split, and community vote comparison.
Design Tools
Figma for Agents
AI agents can write directly to your Figma canvas — design system aware, brand-safe
75%
Panel ship
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Community
Free
Entry
Figma has opened its canvas to AI agents via a new MCP server, moving from read-only design context to full write access. Through the use_figma MCP tool, agents running in Claude Code, Codex, Cursor, and other MCP clients can now create and modify real Figma design assets anchored to your actual design system — using your components, variables, and tokens rather than hallucinating generic ones. A 'Skills' feature lets teams define agent behavior in plain markdown files — no plugin development required. Launched #1 on Product Hunt on April 14 with 263 followers. The beta is free; Figma hasn't figured out how to price agentic seat usage yet. The key design choice: agents are constrained to your actual design system tokens and components, so output is actually usable rather than a vibe-coded mockup you have to rebuild from scratch.
Creative Tools
Open Generative AI
Uncensored open-source studio: 200+ image & video models, zero filters
75%
Panel ship
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Community
Free
Entry
Open Generative AI is a self-hosted, MIT-licensed creative studio that gives access to 200+ image and video generation models — including Flux, Midjourney, Kling, Sora, Veo, and Wan 2.2 — with zero content filters, no prompt rejections, and no subscription fees. It's pitched as a direct open-source alternative to Higgsfield AI, Freepik AI, Krea AI, and Openart AI. The tool supports text-to-image, image-to-image, text-to-video, image-to-video, and audio-driven lip sync generation through a single unified interface. Since it's self-hosted, your generations stay on your machine and never touch a third-party cloud by default. The "no guardrails" pitch will raise eyebrows, but for legitimate use cases — concept art, adult content platforms, edgy creative projects, security research — this fills a real gap left by increasingly restrictive commercial tools. The MIT license means it can be embedded in commercial products.
Reviewer scorecard
“Read-only design context was useful; write access is transformative. Agents constrained to your actual design system tokens means the output is actually usable. The Skills markdown API is elegant — no plugin overhead. Works with all major MCP clients out of the box. The free beta window is a good time to build institutional muscle.”
“Wrapping 200+ models under one API-compatible interface is genuinely useful engineering. Even if you don't care about the 'uncensored' angle, having a single self-hosted studio that covers Flux, Wan, and Sora variants without separate API keys is a legitimate time-saver for prototyping.”
“Agents writing to your production design system is a liability without a robust approval layer. The review UX for design diffs is nowhere near as mature as code review. Design systems carry brand, accessibility, and legal implications. And 'free during beta' with warnings they haven't figured out pricing means workflows you build could get expensive fast.”
“The 'no filters' positioning is a red flag. Most legitimate creative use cases don't need to bypass safety measures, and the lack of guardrails creates real liability for anyone deploying this in a commercial context. Also, 200+ models sounds impressive until you realize half of them are outdated forks.”
“The design-to-code pipeline just collapsed. When agents can read your codebase, write to your Figma design system, and generate code from those designs in one loop — the distinction between design work and engineering work starts to blur. The Skills feature is forward-looking: it's essentially defining agent personas for different design contexts.”
“Commercial AI image platforms are converging on restrictive filters that increasingly block legitimate artistic work. Open-source alternatives that give creators back full control are necessary for the ecosystem. The 'uncensored' framing will attract bad actors, but the infrastructure itself is valuable.”
“For content creators who live in Figma but aren't engineers, this finally makes AI-assisted design feel native. Describing a layout and having the agent use my actual brand components — not generic boxes — is the thing I've been waiting for. Start with a non-production project until you understand how the agent behaves with your design system.”
“The number of times Midjourney or Adobe Firefly has blocked a perfectly reasonable dark fantasy prompt is maddening. Having a self-hosted option that trusts me as an adult creator to make my own choices is exactly what the community has been asking for.”
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