- Figma reveals new AI tools for developers and designers
- Figma finally makes rolls out to all users with full seat
- Code layers come to Figma places
Over the past week, Figma has done well on her many promises revealed at his Config 2025 event.
After announcing the release of four new products – Figma Make, Figma -Webotes, Figma Buzz and Figma Draw – the company has now launched a few new updates for developers and designers along with full roll -out of its large content ideal tool Figma Make.
According to Figma, these updates are about “bridging between the gap between design and code” using new AI tools. So what can users expect now?
What is new in Figma?
For me, the most exciting new release is Figma Make. Finally out of beta it is now available to those with a full seat.
Figma Make is effectively an overall design tool that spans the entire platform, and a massive jump for content ideation where users can start with an empty canvas or copy and paste from Figma design, collaborate on new ideas and then bring these designs over to other Figma tools as places to refine the concepts.
According to the company, Figma Make is fully capable of helping users create “an agent AI interface, a business newsletter and even games.”
When I attended a press briefing in Config London, I was hit by how Yuhki Yamashita, Figma’s Chief Product Officer, repeatedly mentioned, how the premise here is able to quickly induce ideas, throw them out if they do not work, so start again.
At the time, he said, “Our thought experiment was, how can we make it so easy for you to go from the idea into your head to something that is actually, you can put in front of users and validate really quickly. And if it doesn’t work, it’s great. You can then move on to the next idea, or you can keep itering from there.”
But these are not the only major Rollout users who can now try. Figma has also released a new Dev Mode MCP server currently in beta.
The Eagle-Eyed Figma-Watchers will have the clock an early demo of this during Microsoft Build’s opening key.
The company describes the MCP server as a way of delivering design context from Figma – Think variables and styles, the kind of thing – to their favorite LLM, IDE or Agentic Coding Tool, and make sure AI generated code is in accordance with users’ code base.
And finally, code layers are now rolling out over Figma sites, the AI-driven site builder. Here, users with virtually any technical ability can customize sites and build site interactions and animations using AI Prompts, Presetings or RAW code.
I was pretty impressed when I saw Figma places in action at Config, where AI requests were used to convert static text into animated text that responded to marker movements. It is designed in such a way that even a non-designer can easily edit content.
At Config, Yamashita promised bigger things was on the foot and said, “We wanted to make sure we could also support scaled use cases. With this kind of content it is much easier if we have a CMS so that a non-design can come in and comfortably edit that content in a way known to them. And this is something that comes soon.” It seems that it has finally arrived.
You can check the latest tools from the Figma of Click here and navigate to the Products section.



