#Feedback on this prototype!

1 messages · Page 1 of 1 (latest)

gentle sun
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Hi guys! Hope you’re all doing fine.

Would love some feedback ( good or bad doesn’t matter) on this prototype as this is the first UX/UI project I’m ever working on and I’m planning on putting this in my portfolio.

NB; I haven’t finished the Search page.

Would really appreciate it. Thanks in advance

buoyant basin
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I think overall it's a solid layout. I took a screenshot of my local delivery app for context.

For the opening animation maybe make it appear more like a loading bar / location lookup.

Then when you go down to burgers it might be better to keep your text left aligned rather than centered. Keeps the user from having to start at random points when reading. Also the burger photos I'd make a little smaller to keep them roughly the same size and more space around it. Also the price could be made a little more noticeable plus cater for special prices.

Overall solid work and really only a few minor tweaks. Good work.

gentle sun
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Thank you so much 🙏🏽 This was really good advice will definitely do make the changes

low escarp
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I would make the opening animation a lot shorter. 7s is quite long and it would make the app feel slow .. especially if the user would go on this app frequently, that can get annoying super quick.

You have 2 buttons on landing ("Sign in" and "Get startedy" <- might wanna remove that "y" if it's a typo) - but "Get started" takes you to the "Sign in" page. I would remove both of the pages (landing and sign in) Let the user browse the burgers, remove the friction of signing in. And when they decide to buy, you can prompt them to sign in. You can land them straight on home page after the opening animation.

If you decide to have both a search bar on home and a search tab, make sure you give each a clear role: Home screen search bar for a quick-entry search for users who know what they want. Search tab - A rich discovery page: Top picks, categories, filters, deals, trending, recent searches, recommendations... This makes the UI feel intentional, not duplicated.

I would add some categories/filterson home page (mains, sides, drinks .. depending on what they serve) - or if they have only burgers maybe filter by contents (chicken, cheese, vegan.. etc)

Your first selection "Chicken burger" acts like a category. Either make it more obvious that these are categories or, if selected, take the user to that chicken burger to see ingredients and customise, etc.

If these burgers on your home are actually items and not categories, then you could add a quick button "add to basket/order" to speed up the process instead of tapping through many screens.
I would add the prices on home page

The text in your menu tabs is misaligned (see image)

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The grid spacing becomes visually repetitive (everything is square and identical) - I would add some category chips above the grid, a larger first card (“Popular pick”), a horizontal scroll section for promotions, favourites, recommendations..)

Lastly, make sure your pages have titles (Home, Search, Order .. ) Screen readers rely on titles, users need orientation, it helps with mental mapping, titles reduce confusion when screens look similar and it improves navigation when returning to a screen

On the good side:
The grid is easy to scan.
White background keeps the UI fresh and food-focused.
Bottom navigation is standard and familiar.