Affinity Designer vs Webflow — ¿Cuál gana?
Elige Affinity Designer si: Diseñadores que se niegan a pagar el impuesto de suscripción de Adobe y quieren herramientas vector pro por un pago único
Elige Webflow si: Diseñadores que quieren construir sitios web de producción sin desarrolladores — y realmente shipear código limpio
Nuestra opinión: Affinity Designer for simplicity, Webflow for power users.
| Affinity Designer | Webflow | |
|---|---|---|
| Precios | Affinity Designer 2 $69.99 one-time | Free with webflow.io subdomain and 2 pages | Basic $14/mo |
| Funciones | Vector and raster in one app, One-time purchase (no subscription), CMYK and Pantone support, 1,000,000%+ zoom, PSD and AI file import | Visual CSS/HTML builder with full code control, Built-in CMS for blogs, portfolios, and dynamic content, Responsive design without writing media queries, Native hosting with global CDN and SSL, Interactions and animations with zero JavaScript |
| Ideal para | Designers who refuse to pay Adobe’s subscription tax and want pro-grade vector tools for a one-time fee | Designers who want to build production websites without developers — and actually ship clean code |
| Curva de aprendizaje | Intermedio | Difícil |
La verdadera diferencia
Webflow has a free plan; Affinity Designer doesn't. Budget-conscious? That's your answer.
Affinity Designer stands out with Vector and raster in one app and One-time purchase (no subscription). Webflow counters with Visual CSS/HTML builder with full code control and Built-in CMS for blogs, portfolios, and dynamic content.
Affinity Designer's Achilles heel: no plugin ecosystem — what ships is what you get, and the community is small compared to illustrator. Webflow's: steep learning curve if you do not understand css concepts — it is visual but not simple. Pick whichever weakness you can live with.
Conclusión
If you value vector and raster in one app and diseñadores que se niegan, go with Affinity Designer. If diseñadores que quieren construir matters more, Webflow is your pick. Neither is a bad choice — but one will fit your workflow better.