How a Bangalore-Based Startup Quietly Built a Better Spline
Silicon Valley has dominated design tools for decades. But a Bangalore startup is finally challenging the status quo — one Spline migration at a time.
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 Spline, 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.
The Bottom Line for Indian Teams
Spline 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 Technical Edge
Where Spline relies on a proprietary runtime that adds bundle size, ExodeUI compiles to pure React hooks. The result is smaller bundles, better performance, and code that your team can actually read and modify.
For Indian startups where every kilobyte and every millisecond counts, this technical advantage translates directly to better user experience and lower infrastructure costs.
The Indian Context
India produces over 1.5 million engineering graduates every year. We have the talent, the ambition, and the market. What we've lacked is design infrastructure — the tools that let our creativity match our technical capability. ExodeUI changes that.
For too long, Indian teams have been consumers of design tools built for Western markets. Spline is powerful, but it wasn't built with Indian workflows in mind. ExodeUI was built here, by an Indian team, for the global stage — and it shows in every decision.
The Community Factor
ExodeUI is being built in public, with an active community of Indian developers contributing feedback, plugins, and translations. This community-driven approach means the tool evolves based on real user needs — not investor roadmaps.
Spline makes decisions in San Francisco. ExodeUI makes decisions in Koramangala, based on conversations with Indian developers who use the tool every day.
Your Next Step
Stop fighting Spline's React integration. Start building components that work out of the box. ExodeUI is free — built in Bangalore, for the world.