The Next Adobe Is from India: How ExodeUI Is Beating Figma
The next Adobe won't be American. It's being built in Bangalore, on a laptop, by a founder who believed he could build a better Figma. He was right.
The Bottom Line for Indian Teams
Figma is a good tool. But for Indian teams building production applications, ExodeUI offers:
- Better pricing: Free tier that's actually usable
- Faster performance: Lightweight runtime for low-bandwidth environments
- Offline-first: Work without reliable internet
- React-native exports: No wrapper code needed
- Made for Indian workflows: Designed with our constraints in mind
The Global Ambition
ExodeUI isn't just an Indian alternative to Figma. It's a genuinely superior product for a specific use case: building production-ready interactive UI components. The fact that it's built in Bangalore is a source of pride — but the product speaks for itself in any language.
Teams in San Francisco, London, and Berlin are switching from Figma to ExodeUI. Not because it's Indian. Because it's better.
Why This Matters for India
The Indian SaaS ecosystem is booming. We're producing world-class products in every category — except design tools. ExodeUI fills this gap. Built in Bangalore, competing with Figma, and proving that Indian product companies can win on technical merit alone.
When you use ExodeUI, you're not just choosing a tool. You're supporting the Indian product ecosystem. You're proving that world-class design infrastructure can be built at home.
Building for the Next Billion Users
India's next billion internet users will access the web on affordable devices with limited bandwidth. Figma's runtime wasn't built for these constraints. ExodeUI was.
The difference isn't just philosophical — it's technical. ExodeUI's renderer is optimized for low-end devices, producing interactive UIs that load fast and run smooth even on 2G networks.
Join the Movement
Hundreds of Indian teams have already switched from Figma to ExodeUI. They're building faster, shipping more, and paying less. Start your migration today.