When comparing Wikifactory vs Invision Studio, the Slant community recommends Invision Studio for most people. In the question“What are the best prototyping tools?” Invision Studio is ranked 11th while Wikifactory is ranked 20th. The most important reason people chose Invision Studio is:
Going beyond tradition, Invision Studio includes a Marketplace in the application itself to install icon toolkits, design toolkits, whenever, whatever you want to.
Specs
Ranked in these QuestionsQuestion Ranking
Pros
Pro Great content and community
With a community of 140K engineers, designers, SMEs, startups and manufacturers.
Pro It is possible to manufacture prototypes and final parts, directly from the platform
Users can get quotes in 24 hours for 3D printing, CNC machining, sheet metal fabrication and/or injection molding.
Pro Made it easier to document projects
Pro Easy to use
It has real-time collaboration tools like user permission, annotations, chat, notifications, CAD viewer, version control and more.
Pro Built-in marketplace
Going beyond tradition, Invision Studio includes a Marketplace in the application itself to install icon toolkits, design toolkits, whenever, whatever you want to.
Pro Integration with invision cloud
Being a Invision product, it tightly knits with Invision's own cloud services. You can upload prototypes from Invision Studio to Invision Cloud.
Pro Sketch imports
Unlike most tools, Invision Studio openly allows imports from sketch files, allowing you to use Sketch with Invision Studio
Pro Offline support
Invision Studio allows offline use, and you can save files offline, even without logging in to an Invision account.
Cons
Con No Linux support
Despite its amazing portfolio, Invision Studio lacks Linux support - a boon for some people but Invision has openly said they will support it when there's demand.
Con Requires Invision login
You'll be required to login to Invision to use Studio for now. But after logging in, you should be able to access Studio without any hiccups.
