Affinity Designer vs Sketch — 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 Sketch si: Les équipes design Mac-only qui préfèrent la performance d'une app native aux outils basés navigateur
Notre avis: Affinity Designer for simplicity, Sketch for power users.
| Affinity Designer | Sketch | |
|---|---|---|
| Tarifs | Affinity Designer 2 $69.99 one-time | No free plan (30-day trial) | Standard $12/editor/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 | Vector editing, Symbols and shared styles, Prototyping, Developer handoff, Mac-native performance |
| Idéal pour | Designers who refuse to pay Adobe’s subscription tax and want pro-grade vector tools for a one-time fee | Mac-only design teams who prefer native app performance over browser-based tools |
| Courbe d'apprentissage | Moyen | Moyen |
La vraie différence
Sketch has a free plan; Affinity Designer doesn't. Budget-conscious? That's your answer.
Affinity Designer stands out with One-time purchase (no subscription) and CMYK and Pantone support. Sketch counters with Symbols and shared styles and Prototyping.
Affinity Designer's Achilles heel: no plugin ecosystem — what ships is what you get, and the community is small compared to illustrator. Sketch's: mac only — no windows, no linux, no web app. lost massive market share to figma. Pick whichever weakness you can live with.
Le verdict
If you value one-time purchase (no subscription) and les designers qui refusent, go with Affinity Designer. If les équipes design mac-only matters more, Sketch is your pick. Neither is a bad choice — but one will fit your workflow better.