No install. No signup. Just click and edit. The full deck loads as one HTML file, runs offline, and downloads as a copy you own.
Every template in FluidDocs Deck Builder is a single, self-contained HTML file. No server, no build step, no account. Here is what the demo above is doing.
Pure HTML, CSS, and a sprinkle of JS. No install, no signup, no analytics beacons. The file works offline the moment it lands in your browser cache.
Hover the top-left, press E, and every heading becomes editable. Changes auto-save to localStorage so a refresh keeps your edits.
The save shortcut serializes your edited DOM and downloads a fresh HTML file. Real bytes, on your machine, ready to send, host, or open offline.
The templates are the front door. Behind them is a full Claude Code plugin: five type-correct deck builders, four brand-mirror pitch templates, PDF and PPTX import, and a multi-reviewer quality pipeline. Install the plugin and ask for any deck.
Four brand-mirror pitch templates and four type-correct defaults for sales, launch, keynote, and all-hands. Each one is the same single-file recipe as the Stripe demo above.
None. FluidDocs Deck Builder is MIT licensed. Fork it, ship it, sell what you build with it. No telemetry, no signup wall, no rate limits. The templates are the same files you would write by hand, just done already.
No, not for the templates. Open any HTML file in a browser, edit it, download your copy. You will never touch a CLI.
Yes, if you want to generate a new deck from scratch (pitch, sales, launch, keynote, all-hands) or convert a PDF or PPTX into an interactive HTML deck. That is what the plugin and skills are for. Install instructions are in the section above.
Yes. Easy path: press E and rewrite any heading or body copy in the browser, then save.
Full control: open the HTML in any editor. Tokens live at the top of the <style> block as CSS variables (--primary, --ink, --font-display, etc.). Change the values, save, refresh. The whole deck rebrands.
Pitch, Tome, and Gamma are full SaaS products with editors, accounts, and hosting. They are great if you want a closed loop.
FluidDocs Deck Builder is a free, open-source toolkit. The output is a single HTML file you fully own. No vendor lock-in, no monthly fee, runs offline, version-controllable in Git, embeddable anywhere a static file can live. It is the opposite shape: less polish on day one, total control forever.