Figma is excellent for designing app interfaces, but the jump from design file to polished app store screenshots and feature graphics is where many teams lose momentum. Each launch or update requires extracting screens, applying device frames, adjusting layouts for different aspect ratios, and preparing multiple variants. Doing this manually every time breaks the flow.
Mockupper bridges that gap by turning your Figma exports into a repeatable asset generation system.
Export screens from Figma with the right preparation
Start by organizing your Figma file for easy export. Create a dedicated frame or page for marketing screenshots that contains:
- The key screens you want to feature
- Proper device bezels if needed (or remove them if Mockupper will add frames)
- Consistent padding and text sizing that will work at store preview sizes
Use Figma’s export settings for high-resolution PNGs (at least 2x or 3x). Name your files clearly like onboarding-1.png, core-feature.png so the upload step stays organized.
Avoid exporting with shadows or effects that might conflict with Mockupper’s framing system. Clean exports travel better.
Upload and apply consistent treatment in Mockupper
Once you have your raw screens, upload the batch to Mockupper. The tool shines here because it lets you apply a unified visual treatment across the entire set:
- Choose a device frame style that matches your brand
- Set background direction or color palette once for the whole batch
- Add consistent headline positioning and typography
This step replaces the tedious per-image editing you would do in Photoshop or even in Figma itself. The same decisions are applied systematically instead of recreated from scratch.
Generate the variants you actually need
Most app store listings need more than one version of each screen:
- Different text overlays for A/B tests
- Localized versions for different markets
- Platform-specific adaptations (iOS vs Android sizing)
With your base treatment locked in Mockupper, generating these variants becomes a matter of swapping the text or background rather than rebuilding the entire composition. This is where the automation benefit appears — one upload session can produce dozens of usable assets.
Review for store-readiness before export
Before exporting the full set, check a few practical details:
- Does the text remain readable in the small preview thumbnails used by the stores?
- Are key UI elements still visible after framing?
- Does the sequence of screenshots tell a coherent product story?
- Will the same setup be easy to update when the app changes next month?
Treating this review as part of the workflow prevents having to redo work later.
Export and organize for multiple destinations
Mockupper makes it easy to export in batches. Save the outputs into a structured folder system:
store-listing/marketing-campaigns/social-media/press-kit/
Having these ready means your landing page, ads, and update announcements can pull from the same well-maintained asset library instead of scattered one-off files.
Keep the system alive across updates
The real power comes on the second and third update. When you need to refresh screenshots for a new feature, you return to the same Mockupper setup (or saved template if supported), upload the new screens, and the previous treatment is reapplied automatically. What used to be days of design work becomes hours.
Conclusion
Automating the handoff from Figma to store assets is not about replacing designers. It is about removing the repetitive mechanical work so the team can focus on the creative and strategic parts of app marketing. Mockupper turns what used to be a repeated manual process into a system you can run, tweak, and trust across multiple launches.