Promote on r/UI_Design
A focused community for UI designers working on digital interfaces. Discussions center around component design, design systems, accessibility compliance, interaction patterns, and the Figma-centric modern design workflow. Mobile-first design and WCAG accessibility standards are recurring themes.
Best Content That Performs on r/UI_Design
These content types consistently get the most engagement in this community. Match your posts to what the community already loves.
5 Reply Strategies for r/UI_Design
These are the tactics that separate replies that get upvoted and build reputation from ones that get ignored — or flagged.
- 1
Raise accessibility considerations as a matter of course — WCAG contrast ratios, keyboard navigation, screen reader support — not as an afterthought.
- 2
Reference specific component patterns by name (cards, modals, data tables, form patterns) when giving feedback — shows you think in design systems, not one-offs.
- 3
Figma is the near-universal tool in this community — frame all tool and workflow recommendations around how they integrate with or complement Figma.
- 4
In critique posts, suggest a specific improvement rather than just noting the problem — "the button label is too small; try 14px minimum with 1.5x line height for accessibility" is actionable.
- 5
Mobile-first considerations are frequently missed in desktop-first designs — raising responsive breakpoints and touch target sizing in critiques earns appreciation.
Dos & Don'ts on r/UI_Design
Every community has unwritten (and sometimes written) rules. Break them and you'll be ignored; follow them and you'll build real credibility.
Do
- ✓ Raise accessibility (WCAG, contrast, keyboard nav) as standard practice
- ✓ Reference component patterns and design system thinking in feedback
- ✓ Frame all tools around their Figma integration and workflow fit
- ✓ Give specific, actionable improvement suggestions in critique
- ✓ Address mobile-first and responsive design in desktop-focused critiques
Don't
- ✕ Give UI feedback that ignores accessibility requirements
- ✕ Recommend tools without addressing Figma integration
- ✕ Focus on aesthetics alone without component system thinking
- ✕ Give desktop-only critique without addressing mobile experience
- ✕ Use vague "improve the UI" feedback without specific components or patterns
Reply like a regular on r/UI_Design —
without spending hours crafting every reply
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- Understands r/UI_Design tone and what gets flagged as spam
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