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If you’ve ever stared at a blank slide and felt your creativity drain away while you fiddle with alignment and font sizes, you’ll understand why tools like Gamma are getting attention. I’ve been juggling pitch decks and client proposals for years, and Gamma felt promising the first time I tried it — but real usefulness is more than just a shiny demo.
I used Gamma for three real projects over the past month: a short investor pitch, a one-page client proposal, and a lecture summary for a class I teach. Below are first-hand impressions plus practical pros and cons that matter in the real world.
Rating: ★★★★☆ (4.6/5)
Gamma is the fastest way I’ve found to get a clean, modern presentation out of a text prompt. If you need something that looks good, reads well, and is share-ready in minutes — especially for web distribution — Gamma will save you time. If you’re a designer who needs pixel-perfect control, or depend on elaborate animations, you’ll still want PowerPoint or Figma.
Best for: Founders, salespeople, educators, and anyone who needs to produce attractive decks quickly.
Gamma is a web-first, card-based presentation tool that generates decks from text prompts. Think: you type “pitch deck for a specialty coffee subscription” and Gamma builds an outline, writes slide copy, chooses a theme, and pulls images — usually in under a minute.
It’s not “AI magic” in the Hollywood sense — Gamma still needs direction — but it automates the boring formatting and structure work so you can focus on the message.
Quick real example: I pasted a Google Doc of meeting notes and in about 40 seconds Gamma produced a 10-card draft. It nailed the high-level flow but compressed some of my numbers into a single card — which I then expanded manually.

In short: a rough deck can be live in under 20 minutes; a polished client-ready version took me about 30–45 minutes including manual edits.
Paste a URL, meeting notes, or a one-liner. Gamma summarizes, highlights key points and suggests images. It doesn’t always preserve every detail (and sometimes it over-abstracts), but the outline is usually useful.
Rather than fixed 16:9 slides, Gamma uses cards that can grow. That helps when you’ve got long copy — you don’t end up cramming everything into tiny text boxes.
Switch themes and the whole deck updates (fonts, spacing, colors). That feature alone saved me a couple of hours on a client deck that needed a different brand vibe.
Because Gamma lives on the web, you can embed YouTube, Typeform, Airtable views, Figma embeds, etc. For a workshop deck I ran, embedding a Typeform survey saved us a follow-up email.
Note: pricing and plan names change. If billing is important to you, check Gamma’s site before you subscribe.
| Feature | Gamma AI | PowerPoint / Google Slides |
|---|---|---|
| Speed | 🚀 Very fast for drafts | 🐢 Slower if you start from scratch |
| Learning curve | Low — no design skills needed | Medium to high for advanced features |
| Design freedom | Medium — theme-driven | High — full control |
| Mobile friendliness | Excellent | Varies |
| Offline editing | Limited | Excellent |
My rule of thumb: Use Gamma to create the first strong draft. Use PowerPoint when final visual control, animations, or accessibility compliance matter.
These small frictions are fixable, but good to know up front.
If your job requires strict brand templates or heavy animation control, Gamma is better as part of your workflow rather than the final tool.
Gamma is not perfect, but it does something valuable: it removes low-value formatting work and gives you a strong starting point. I’ve stopped spending an hour on slide spacing and instead spend that time sharpening the story. That’s a win.
Would I toss PowerPoint out entirely? No — not yet. But for quick, modern, shareable decks that look good on the web, Gamma is now my go-to first draft tool.
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