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Open Design Blog

Best AI Design Agents in 2026: An Honest, Tested Guide Best AI Prototyping Tools in 2026: An Honest, Tested Guide Best AI Design Tools in 2026: An Honest, Tested Guide Best Bolt.new Alternatives in 2026: An Honest Comparison Best Design-to-Code Tools in 2026: An Honest, Tested Guide Best Figma Alternatives in 2026: An Honest, Tested Guide How to Use Claude Code for Frontend Design (2026 Guide) Best Lovable Alternatives in 2026: An Honest Comparison Best v0 Alternatives in 2026: An Honest Comparison Open Design is coming to Osaka / Kyoto Open Design 0.12.0: your brand is a design system Vibe Design Tools: An Honest Guide to What Works Vibe Design vs Vibe Coding: Where They Split and Why It Matters Vibe Design with Google Stitch: What It Nails, Where It Traps You What Is Vibe Design? The 2026 Guide to Designing by Intent Open Design 0.11.0: the Bazaar Open Design 0.10.0: the all-in-one design workspace The open-source alternative to Figma Open Design 0.8.0: everything is a plugin The layout layer the canvas used to hide How to port a Figma workflow into an Open Design plugin BYOK reality check: 5 things that break in Open Design today The open-source alternative to Claude Design 31 skills, 72 systems: how the Open Design library works BYOK design workflow: run Claude, Codex, or Qwen on your own key Why we built Open Design as a skill layer, not a product
Open Design 0.9.0: design for everyone
Open Design · 2026-06-02 · via Open Design Blog

Open Design 0.9.0 is the install-and-create release. No API-key scavenger hunt, no three-CLI setup — open the app, sign in once, pick a model, and start building. Plus a bigger agent bench, a real plugin library, and easier installs on Windows and Linux.

Tag open-design-v0.9.0, shipped 2 June 2026. 310 PRs from 98 contributors in seven days. Codename “Design for everyone” — this is the install-and-create release. For three releases we asked you to do work before you could do work: install a CLI, find an API key, paste secrets, test authentication, pick the right model name from a list you had to look up. Every one of those steps was a place where someone bounced before they ever made anything.

0.9.0 deletes those steps.

If you want the long version, the release notes on GitHub have it. This post is the short version: what changed under the hood, what you can do with it today, and where to start.

Why getting started was the work

A design tool’s first impression almost never happens on the canvas. It happens before the canvas — in the setup nobody wants to do. We stared at our own onboarding funnel long enough to reach an uncomfortable conclusion: a lot of people left before making anything. Not because the product was wrong, but because “start” was too expensive.

0.9.0 cuts starting down to the one line people actually wanted:

Open the app → sign in once → pick a model → start creating.

No configuration. No CLI installation. No API key required.

The three plates

Open Design AMR — official AI, ready the moment you install. Getting started used to be a tax: install a CLI, hunt down an API key, paste secrets, test auth, fight the shell — and only then start designing. 0.9.0 ships Open Design AMR inside the installer. The AI engine comes with the app; there’s no separate CLI or API key to set up. Onboarding now leads with AMR, sign-in stays one click away on desktop, your available models stay fresh automatically, and account and balance status live right in the UI. Image attachments work out of the box. Sign in once, pick a model, go.

The agent bench gets much bigger. Aider, Trae CLI, Antigravity, and DeepSeek Reasonix all join the picker, giving builders more real local-agent paths instead of a single blessed workflow. Aider gets first-class branding, Trae runs over ACP in yolo mode, and the new adapters make Open Design feel less like one agent integration and more like the place where agents come to work. Model picking stops feeling like scrolling a phone book, too: search cuts through long lists, and a shared BYOK catalog keeps Settings and the inline switcher aligned so switching models is fast instead of fiddly.

Skills become a real plugin ecosystem. Skill bundles graduate into first-class Plugins: visible in the drawer, listable from the CLI, indexed on the site, and easier to explain to users. One extension model, one library, one mental model. The official GSAP plugin brings serious web animation into the agent loop, and Research Decision Room turns research prompts into structured multi-role reviews instead of one long answer. The on-site plugin library now mirrors the in-app taxonomy and reads natively across locales, and plugin and template detail pages turn from static listings into a real discovery surface — preview, install, try, share.

What else lands in 0.9.0

The release is wide. The pieces worth pulling forward:

  • Keep talking while the model is still working. Queue the next send mid-stream, and Open Design continues the moment the current turn finishes. Studio and Draw follow the same flow, so capturing an idea doesn’t depend on waiting for the previous response to end.
  • Design systems move from files to living assets. Rename them, pin your own to the top, read real swatches from their color tables, and connect design-system projects to GitHub without the zip-file shuffle.
  • Review keeps moving while the artifact changes. Comment mode now supports attachments, live preview updates, and clean deselection, so screenshots and notes stay attached to the work instead of freezing the flow.
  • Routines feel scheduled, not scripted. A real picker, natural-language summaries, newest-first ordering, auto-focus after create, localization, and duplicate-slot cleanup make automations easier to trust.
  • MCP clients can do real workspace work. Write files, delete files, delete projects, resolve the active project directory, run generation loops, and bootstrap Codex from one place. External clients can now participate in the workspace instead of only observing it.
  • Trying Open Design gets easier on Windows and Linux. Windows gets a portable zip path; Linux gets a Docker / Podman Compose one-click setup. Less install friction, faster first run.

The full list runs to 310 PRs. The release notes on GitHub carry the rest.

What to do with it today

If you’re…Start here
New to Open DesignDownload the desktop app, sign in once with AMR, pick a model, and send your first prompt — there’s no API-key step on the path anymore
Already running Open DesignLet the packaged auto-update bring you to 0.9.0; onboarding now leads with AMR
Already driving Claude Code, Codex, Aider, or Trae in the terminalPoint them at the same OD CLI the desktop app ships with; your agent is the design engine and the skill layer adds taste and structure without a new app
On Windows or LinuxGrab the Windows portable zip, or use the Linux Docker / Podman Compose one-click setup for a first run without touching a system installer

What to do next

If you’ve been waiting for “install and create” to actually be true, this is the release. Download the desktop app, sign in with AMR, and run the brief you were going to run anyway — this time there’s no setup between opening the app and the first artifact.

Download Open Design.

310 PRs in 7 days. The install-and-create release only exists because so many people showed up from so many different angles and built the missing pieces. A movement doesn’t ship from one team’s laptops; it ships from the people who showed up and built. We see you. 🫡

Next step

Download the desktop build

Take the open-source design workspace for a spin, inspect the release notes on GitHub, or join our Discord for live community feedback.