Release
Decks and prototypes that look designed
Proposals and prototypes now generate in a cohesive visual theme with real rhythm, designed covers, a consistent footer, and honest data charts — not flat, templated output.
A proposal you present to leadership and a clickable prototype you put in front of a stakeholder are deliverables. They were coming out flat — one bland gray fallback, every slide the same weight, no charts. This release rebuilds the visual layer of both so the output reads as designed, not generated.
One cohesive theme, end to end
Every deck and prototype now generates against a real visual theme — a coordinated palette, type pairing, and depth system — instead of the old neutral default. The theme is chosen to fit the audience: an exec pitch gets a bold, high-contrast keynote look; an engineering kickoff a precise, slate-and-mono technical one; a customer demo a warm editorial one; everything else a calm, trustworthy corporate one.
The same theme is applied identically to every slide and page, so a deck stops drifting from slide to slide — the cover, the body, and the close all clearly belong to the same document.
Rhythm: rich where it matters, calm everywhere else
Not every slide should shout. The deck now decides, up front, which moments earn the full visual treatment — the cover, the decisive number, the closing ask — and keeps the rest clean and type-led. The result has pace: a few designed peaks instead of a wall of equally-loud slides. Prototypes do the same — a hero or landing page gets the full treatment; forms, errors, and confirmations stay deliberately flat (an error screen should look like something went wrong, not like a celebration).
This is enforced, not suggested: there's a hard budget on how many "anchor" moments a deck or prototype can have, so it can't tip into busy noise.
Designed covers, section dividers, and a consistent footer
Decks now open on a real full-bleed cover, can break between acts with section dividers, and carry a clean, byte-identical footer (deck title + slide number) on every body slide — so the whole deck feels bound together rather than assembled.
Charts from real numbers — not black boxes
Proposals and prototypes can now render honest bar charts and headline KPIs, drawn from numbers that actually appear in your PRD. They're generated as crisp, static graphics that render the same on screen, in Present mode, in a shared link, and in the PDF export. Made-up numbers are explicitly off the table — if the data isn't there, you get a labelled "metric to confirm," never an invented chart.
What stays true
All of this rides on top of the same honesty rules as before: no fabricated metrics or testimonials, no fake browser or phone frames, no placeholder image boxes. The richer look never buys permission for dishonest content — it just makes the honest content land.