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Rive Is Great for Designers. ExodeUI Is Great for Engineers. Here's Why.

2026-05-14ExodeUI Team
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Rive was built for a world where designers create and developers implement. ExodeUI was built for a world where those lines are blurring. Here's the technical difference and why it matters for your React app.

Rendering Architecture

Rive uses a canvas-based renderer that draws pixels directly. This gives smooth animations but makes DOM integration, accessibility, and SEO challenging. ExodeUI renders as native HTML/SVG elements — every animation is a real DOM node that search engines can read and screen readers can interpret.

Bundle impact: Rive's renderer adds significant payload. ExodeUI's renderer is approximately 80% smaller because it leverages the browser's native SVG engine rather than shipping its own canvas implementation.

State Management

Rive treats animation as a timeline. You define a sequence of keyframes and the engine interpolates between them. This works for linear playback but struggles with interactive UI where states depend on user input, API responses, or conditional logic.

ExodeUI treats animation as a state machine. Every visual configuration is a named state. Transitions between states are triggered by events, not time markers. The result is inherently interactive — your component always knows what state it's in and how to transition.

Export Quality

Rive exports to JSON (.riv, .json) that requires a player library to render. This means you're shipping a runtime player + the animation data.

ExodeUI exports to clean React components or Swift code. No player library needed. The output is readable, maintainable code that your team can understand and modify without opening the visual editor.

Cross-Platform Reality

Rive supports multiple platforms but requires different runtime files for each. Your web build has one player, iOS has another.

ExodeUI exports to React and Swift from the same visual file. The component behaves identically on both platforms because the state machine is compiled, not interpreted. This means less testing, fewer platform-specific bugs, and faster shipping.

React Integration

Integrating Rive into React requires: a wrapper library, lifecycle management (mount, unmount, update), state synchronization between React state and Rive state, and bundle optimization to avoid shipping the player twice.

ExodeUI was built for React from day one. The export is a React component with hooks. useState → ExodeUI state. useEffect → ExodeUI transitions. The mental model matches perfectly.

Your Next Step

Stop fighting Rive's React integration. Start building components that work out of the box. ExodeUI is free — built in Bangalore, for the world.

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