Design

Benchmarking AI vibe-coding tools against design intent

Bring the same UI designs into multiple AI-assisted “vibe-coding”/build tools to compare how faithfully each tool implements the intended visual direction and UX decisions.

Why the human is still essential here

A designer must define the design intent, run the evaluation, and judge whether deviations add value or introduce noise; the tool output isn’t accepted blindly.

How people use this

Figma-to-React codegen shootout

Export the same key screens/components from Figma into two design-to-code generators and compare visual fidelity, responsiveness, and cleanup effort before handoff.

Locofy.ai / Anima

Prompt-to-UI rebuild comparison

Give two prompt-based UI builders the same screen requirements and design constraints, then assess which output best matches the intended layout and interaction patterns.

Vercel v0 / Bolt.new

Design-system adherence benchmark

Ask two AI coding assistants to implement the same components using your tokens and component APIs, then review diffs for spacing, typography, and accessibility compliance.

Cursor / GitHub Copilot

Community stories (1)

LinkedIn

If you’re a designer and think you need to know every new AI tool, you’re wrong.

If you’re a designer and think you need to know every new AI tool, you’re wrong.

Every day, dozens of new AI tools appear. Keeping up with all of them is a full-time job, and it’s not the job of a designer.


Here’s what designers who stay ahead actually do.


• They don’t try to integrate every new tool into their workflow.

• They stay curious and open to new ways of working.

• They’re comfortable operating in uncertainty and ambiguity.

• They try things, evaluate them critically, and decide whether a tool genuinely improves their work or is just noise.


For instance, I recently started designing an app to help manage my kid’s finances, mainly to test a few tools. When I brought the same designs into two different vibe-coding tools, the results were vastly different.


One followed my designs closely. The other went completely off in visual direction. That contrast made it clear which tool respected design intent, and which one introduced more noise than value.


So don’t try to learn every AI tool.

Explore. Test. Experiment.

Because at the end of the day, design and UX fundamentals haven’t changed.


The designers who stand out aren’t the ones who master tools.

They’re the ones who influence decisions, help others visualize what’s possible, and collaborate effectively to make it real.


Staying relevant isn’t about chasing tools. It’s about knowing what to ignore.

MR
Marco RodriguesHead of CX & Design
Feb 24, 2026