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We Need to Make FigPals a Permanent Feature! Sign the Petition! 🐾


Neel Singh

Alright, guys FigPals were the best (and weirdest) thing to come out of April Fools’ this year. They follow your cursor, help you design, and love you unconditionally… maybe too much. 👀

But here’s the problem—they’re only available for April Fun Week! 😭

We can’t let this be just a one-time joke. FigPals deserve to be a permanent feature (with a toggle for those who don’t want constant companionship). That’s why I made a Change.org petition to show Figma how much we want to keep them!

👉 Sign here: https://www.change.org/p/make-figpals-a-permanent-figma-feature

Let’s make sure our tiny, slightly obsessive design assistants don’t get deleted forever. #KeepFigPals 🩷🐾

mr bonky
mr bonky

 

40 replies

Krystel5
  • New Member
  • 1 reply
  • April 2, 2025

Agree! I love it so much it’s so cute


Neel Singh
  • Author
  • New Member
  • 1 reply
  • April 2, 2025
Krystel5 wrote:

Agree! I love it so much it’s so cute

Sign up the petition and lets make this happen were at 71 votes now 💪


Lydia Hesterman

YES IF they take my son from me I will riot 


Lavinia Gabriela

Yesss!! I no longer feel alone on this screen. 😅
 

 


Leo_Vogel2
  • New Member
  • 4 replies
  • April 2, 2025

Please don’t get rid of FigPals. It’s a fun feature.


Robert Chen

100% 
Like how can you say NO to this? 


Ashlee_Williams

I agree with ​@Lydia Hesterman. I’ve become emotionally attached to my beautiful son Goober; you can’t take him away from me, Figma!


Shiva Moin
  • New Member
  • 1 reply
  • April 2, 2025

100% agreed! LOVE my pal and I want this as emotional support at all times


WendyANDLilith

PLEASE, let us keep them!!!


Wolle
  • New Participant
  • 10 replies
  • April 3, 2025

These are the priorities? There are so many urgent construction sites and Figma is investing huge development resources in a Digital Tamagotchi?

Instead, how about some long overdue features that would dramatically improve Figma:

  • Responsive Overlays
  • Shadows are finally no longer inherited from parent elements in the preview
  • A separate configuration field for tooltips with styles (with alignment, arrows, text, colors, etc.)
  • Real scrollbars with their own configuration field for styles

THOSE would be areas where resources should flow.


Shallwey
  • New Member
  • 2 replies
  • April 3, 2025
Wolle wrote:

These are the priorities? There are so many urgent construction sites and Figma is investing huge development resources in a Digital Tamagotchi?

Instead, how about some long overdue features that would dramatically improve Figma:

  • Responsive Overlays
  • Shadows are finally no longer inherited from parent elements in the preview
  • A separate configuration field for tooltips with styles (with alignment, arrows, text, colors, etc.)
  • Real scrollbars with their own configuration field for styles

THOSE would be areas where resources should flow.

Indeed, knowing this project is just a temporary Easter egg comes as a relief for me. I'm surprised Figma would allocate resources to developing seemingly useless features rather than addressing the productivity-critical functionalities we urgently need


Elena8
  • New Member
  • 1 reply
  • April 3, 2025

Not everythihng needs to be about being productive. I’m happy they found the space for a little fun. It is very refreshing. For me those tiny details move me as user from like, to love the software. 


Nadya Eddy
  • New Member
  • 1 reply
  • April 3, 2025

Figma if you’re seeing this please!! Our Figma Pal innies have very real lives and we have to save them!!!


Clinton Rhodes

Signed.


ahorst-kr
  • New Member
  • 1 reply
  • April 3, 2025

Everyone on my team absolutely loves these. So cute when we’re in the same file. Really hoping they stay! Listen to the people Figma!


vle2
  • New Member
  • 2 replies
  • April 3, 2025

pleaseeee 😭. think about all the merch u can sell :P 


Samantha Alva

These are absolutely adorable, me and my classmate had a good laugh about them. Makes homework more enjoyable. I named mine Cheese. 😂


Matthew_Sear

I’ll be honest, FigPals was a delightful surprise. It was light hearted, unexpected, and a great example of how a design tool can have personality. I loved seeing the community respond with joy, humour, and genuine attachment to their little floating sidekicks. It was refreshing to see something designed purely to bring a bit of fun into the workflow in a field that can sometimes feel fast-paced and high-pressure.

But that’s also why I think now is the perfect time to have a slightly broader conversation.

FigPals clearly showed what the Figma team is capable of the attention to detail, the interactivity, the animation polish, the emotional nuance. That same care, when applied to core features, could solve some of the most persistent friction points that so many of us experience on a daily basis.

Because as fun as FigPals were, the reality is that the basics still feel incomplete in many areas. We’re still working around issues with component management, where updates don’t always propagate properly unless published. Detaching and editing nested components creates confusion. Auto layout remains unpredictable with vertical stacking, scroll regions, and frame resizing often requiring more troubleshooting than they should.

Variables and modes introduced an exciting direction, but the experience of using them at scale is still clunky. You duplicate variable collections. Countless bugs and errors occur when linking and moving them around, and there are no simple and easy ways to apply variable values, which leads to lower adoption. Applying them in prototypes is limited. Even basic light and dark mode transitions still don’t feel fully supported or smooth across the system.

Style and asset management across libraries is often harder than it should be. Something as simple as copying or duplicating does not exist, and you'll have to perform a cut and undo workaround to achieve what should be a straightforward copy-paste task. Adding variables to style is challenging, requiring workarounds that feel outdated in 2025.

Prototyping remains a limiting factor for anyone attempting to communicate complex interaction design. Scroll behaviour is inconsistent in preview mode, smart animate seldom functions as needed, and the precision of animation timing is still lacking. Moreover, once you move beyond the design surface into development workflows, the gaps widen further. Dev Mode’s licensing model divides teams, APIs lack essential flexibility, and plugin developers continue to encounter stability and documentation challenges.

And all of this sits on top of ongoing performance issues, lag in large files, crashes that still occur mid-work, font rendering differences between browser and desktop, the kind of things that chip away at confidence when trying to build at scale.

Even collaboration workflows, which should be seamless, still leave a lot to be desired. Commenting on large files is difficult to manage. Sharing and access flows are too rigid.

These aren’t edge cases. They’re not wish list items. They’re the everyday workflows we all rely on. They’re the foundation. And when that foundation doesn’t feel stable, it makes it harder to enjoy everything else.

So my hope is this: that the spirit and craft behind FigPals, the joy, the detail, the polish, becomes a signal for what’s possible across the rest of the platform. That the same thoughtfulness is given to the fundamentals we use every day. Because when the foundation is strong, everything from the fun features to the mission-critical ones becomes more meaningful, impactful, and trusted.

We don’t need to lose Figma's playful side. But we do need to pay the same attention to the parts of the product that are holding teams back, not because they’re not innovative, but because they’re not yet finished.

Thanks to the Figma team for pushing the boundaries of what’s possible. I just hope what comes next is a doubling down on the basics, not because they’re simple but essential.


Matt K
  • New Member
  • 1 reply
  • April 4, 2025

Please please please let them stay! I’m already attached to my FigPal, and my heart will ache if she’s gone :(


Vosidiy_M
  • New Member
  • 4 replies
  • April 4, 2025

Please remove it, Distracting my attention. Not useful. It takes space from toolbar. Every element makes the app heavy and eats RAM.

if figma wants to keep that thing, then give an option to remove/hide from settings. I don’t want to see useless elements


Raz_Pulurian
Matthew_Sear wrote:

So my hope is this: that the spirit and craft behind FigPals, the joy, the detail, the polish, becomes a signal for what’s possible across the rest of the platform. That the same thoughtfulness is given to the fundamentals we use every day. Because when the foundation is strong, everything from the fun features to the mission-critical ones becomes more meaningful, impactful, and trusted.

We don’t need to lose Figma's playful side. But we do need to pay the same attention to the parts of the product that are holding teams back, not because they’re not innovative, but because they’re not yet finished.

Beautiful post. 100% agree. Glad they found space to have fun, but also questioning what could have been delivered with those resources from the long backlog of long overdue feature requests. I really hope that Figma redirects more resources to the basics moving forward, but I can’t say I’m hopeful. Based on past updates, I have a feeling it’s going to be more new product launches like FigDocs and FigSheets or something, and less attention to getting the basics in their existing products up to speed. Like, why do I need to rely on 3rd party plugins to export variables for my devs?


Libby Eddings

While I agree that there are a lot of things to change or fix in figma, I found so much joy in the little figpals. If nothing else, thank you to the team that made them for making my life a little brighter and joy filled this week. Much needed, much appreciated.


BethS
  • New Member
  • 1 reply
  • April 4, 2025

I really hope they keep the FigPals around. I’m going to be so sad if my FigPal is gone when I start work next week 💔


3HX
  • New Member
  • 4 replies
  • April 5, 2025

I will cry if i lose my FigPal, it’s my only real friend :(


3HX
  • New Member
  • 4 replies
  • April 5, 2025

Hello one and all,

I would kindly ask the Figma developers to keep the FigPal’s feature as it is great and all that hard work should stick permenantly.

I would say that it would be great if we had some more customisation settings, think Clippy on windows XP. Helpful little guy.

I would like the FigPal to stick to my cursor, not have a animation delay, personally I feel like it would be good if you could toggle that so either they are stuck to your cursor, delayed, or you put them back in their house.

Great feature, pls keep


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