Narrate

A presentation builder where the output looks like a web page, not a slide deck. Content flows down the page. The design is handled. You share a link.

Why it was built

I spent years making presentations as a data scientist and product manager. The ideas were fine, and the presentations actually looked good — I cared about that. But getting there kept taking half a day. Every time. I had templates, and they helped for a while, then stopped. There was always something to adjust, realign, or redo.

Then AI tools arrived and promised to fix this. They mostly didn't. The content was reasonable, but the output looked like something a machine had assembled — inconsistent spacing, layouts that were almost right, fonts that didn't quite work. I stopped trusting them for anything client-facing.

Narrate came out of those two frustrations. No canvas, no layout decisions — you write in blocks and the presentation handles the rest. And because the visual system is structured, AI can generate content into it and the result actually looks like it was designed.

"No canvas. No layout decisions — you add a heading, a paragraph, a chart, a Gantt timeline, and the presentation takes shape around the content."

What Narrate is for

If you make a lot of presentations and spend more time on how they look than what they say, this is for you.

It also works well if you want AI to build the content and you're tired of the output looking like AI built it.

What makes it different

There's no canvas. You don't position anything. You add a heading, a paragraph, a chart, a Gantt timeline — the presentation takes shape around the content. Design isn't your problem.

The MCP integration is the part I'm most proud of. Every other AI presentation tool I've tried produces slides that look generated — close but off in ways you notice immediately. Narrate's block system is consistent enough that AI-generated content looks designed, not assembled. You get the speed without the tell.

About the founder

Amirali Haddadi

Founder, Narrate

Before Narrate, he worked as a data scientist and product manager. He built Narrate solo and launched it in May 2026.

The best way to understand Narrate is to build something with it.

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