Affinity Designer vs Rive — Lequel l'emporte ?
Choisissez Affinity Designer si: Les designers qui refusent de payer la taxe d'abonnement Adobe et veulent des outils vectoriels pro pour un paiement unique
Choisissez Rive si: Les développeurs d'apps et motion designers qui ont besoin d'animations interactives réagissant à l'input utilisateur en temps réel
Notre avis: Affinity Designer for simplicity, Rive for power users.
| Affinity Designer | Rive | |
|---|---|---|
| Tarifs | Affinity Designer 2 $69.99 one-time | Free for 3 files with community features | Creator $14/mo |
| Fonctionnalités | Vector and raster in one app, One-time purchase (no subscription), CMYK and Pantone support, 1,000,000%+ zoom, PSD and AI file import | State machine editor for interactive animations, Lightweight runtimes for iOS, Android, Web, and Flutter, Real-time collaboration on animation files, Bone-based rigging for character animation, Runtime event triggers for app logic integration |
| Idéal pour | Designers who refuse to pay Adobe’s subscription tax and want pro-grade vector tools for a one-time fee | App developers and motion designers who need interactive animations that respond to user input in real time |
| Courbe d'apprentissage | Moyen | Difficile |
La vraie différence
Rive 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). Rive counters with State machine editor for interactive animations and Lightweight runtimes for iOS, Android, Web, and Flutter.
Affinity Designer's Achilles heel: no plugin ecosystem — what ships is what you get, and the community is small compared to illustrator. Rive's: the state machine concept is powerful but intimidating — non-developers will hit a wall fast. Pick whichever weakness you can live with.
Le verdict
If you value vector and raster in one app and les designers qui refusent, go with Affinity Designer. If les développeurs d'apps et matters more, Rive is your pick. Neither is a bad choice — but one will fit your workflow better.