StudioLink alleviates one of the pain points of using the Adobe suite, namely having to flick between different applications to make edits to photos and illustrations. The biggest selling point of Affinity Publisher – and the big reveal the company held back for last week’s launch – is StudioLink. What’s the killer feature that would make me switch (aside from the price)? What’s performance like? And how compatible is it with InDesign files? Affinity Publisher review: what’s the killer feature? Instead, I’m going to focus on the three key questions that I think any Adobe InDesign user would ask when considering whether to move to Affinity. If you want to get a clearer grasp of the main features, I suggest you take a look at the excellent Affinity Publisher tutorials. Suffice to say that I think Affinity Publisher is a highly competent publishing package with most of the tools that professionals will seek, let alone the enthusiast market that Serif is chasing. I’m not going to go through the package, describing the key features and their pros and cons. Whilst Adobe wants a £50 monthly stipend for the three software packages listed above, Affinity will sell you each of its products on a standalone, old-school, one-off licence that costs less than a month of an Adobe subscription.Īffinity Publisher launched last week and I’ve spent the past few days playing with its huge range of powerful publishing tools.
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