The Figma alternative for non-designers: ship a wireframe in 5 minutes
Figma is built for designers — its surface area, plugin ecosystem, and component model take fifty hours to learn before you produce your first usable wireframe. dxmax is built for everyone else: founders sketching a SaaS dashboard in their head, product managers scoping a feature for engineering, AI coders who need a visual blueprint before Cursor generates code. You describe what you need in a sentence; dxmax generates a production-ready wireframe with realistic data, a coherent design system, and editable HTML you can hand to a developer or ship as-is.
Where Figma asks you to draw rectangles, dxmax asks you what you are trying to build. The AI proposes layout, structure, copy, and a design language. You iterate by chatting — "make the hero darker," "swap the pricing tiers for a comparison table" — not by dragging frames. The output is real HTML and CSS, not a static mockup, so the gap between design and implementation disappears.
Use dxmax for the first 80% of design work: wireframes, mockups, landing pages, dashboards, admin panels, and full SaaS screens. Then bring Figma in if your designer wants a high-fidelity polish. Most teams find they ship the dxmax output directly. The free tier lets you generate one prompt every 24 hours; Pro unlocks 100 per day.